Small Island: What's Inside
Small Island: What's Inside
Small Island: What's Inside
generation and revoked their immigration status. People had to public. Families constructed bomb shelters in their back
return home or faced an uncertain future after spending gardens or gathered in underground train stations to shelter
decades building a life in Britain. A public outcry forced the whenever they heard the air raid sirens. Families and neighbors
government to reconsider the treatment of the Windrush sorted through the rubble of destroyed buildings in a
generation, and apologies and assurances were given to community effort to preserve whatever they could. The
members of the Caribbean community who live in the United collective public response fostered a combative spirit in the
Kingdom. A special day celebrating the Windrush generation British public, and the stoicism of those enduring the Blitz
was announced, and Windrush Day is now celebrated annually became a hallmark of international news reports which
on June 22. suggested that the bombing raids would not be enough to
break the British spirit in the fight against Germany. The British
Many of the characters in Small Island are part of the Windrush response to the Blitz continued to improve. Better aircraft,
generation. Gilbert Joseph travels on the Empire Windrush and better air defense, and the proliferation of electromagnetic
serves in the British military. He and his wife Hortense face sensor technology such as radar made it easier to repel the
racial abuse in England, and many of the incidents they enemy aircraft. The Blitz was effectively ended in 1941 when
encounter are based on the experiences of the author Andrea the Germans refocused their war effort on an invasion of the
Levy's parents who were members of the Windrush generation. Soviet Union.
The Blitz Queenie and Bernard Bligh live in London during the attacks.
They cower from the bombs in their homemade shelter, and
Queenie volunteers in an emergency center that serves people
The Blitz is the name given to the nighttime bomb attacks
who have lost their homes and possessions. Gilbert and
carried out by Germany against London and other cities in the
Hortense arrive in a Britain that is rebuilding in the aftermath of
United Kingdom during World War II (1939–45). The most
the devastating attacks.
destructive bombing period occurred between September
1940 and May 1941 after the German Air Force had failed to
take control of the airways above Britain in the first year of the
war. The Blitz as it came to be called resulted in the deaths of Jamaican Independence
43,000 British civilians and injuries to 139,000 more. The bomb
attacks also destroyed houses, factories, shops, and many Jamaica became an independent country on August 6, 1962.
other buildings but had little impact on Britain's ability to wage For more than three centuries the country had been a colony
76 days of consecutive bombing during the first months of the signaled the demise of the British Empire. World War I
Blitz. The German bombers then began targeting other cities. (1914–18) and World War II (1939–45) resulted in huge
An attack on Coventry was particularly devastating. The attack economic damage to Britain and a massive loss of life. Many
killed 380 people and injured 865 more. The city's historic people from British colonies which included Jamaicans fought
center was also destroyed. The death and destruction in the on Britain's behalf in the war. Facing economic destruction and
British cities brought home the reality of the war to the British changing public opinion, the decades after the end of World
people and illustrated the total nature of modern warfare. Even War II saw many colonized countries gain independence. India
those at home or hundreds of miles away from the front were became independent in 1947, Kenya became independent in
1963, and Hong Kong was returned to China in 1997. Royal Opera House and the British Broadcasting Corporation.
At 25 she met a graphic designer named Bill Mayblin, and the
Jamaican independence was the result of mounting calls for two eventually married.
independence from Jamaican citizens. The People's National
Party (PNP) was founded in 1938 and the Jamaica Labour
Party (JLP) was established in 1943. Both parties aimed to Race and Literature
achieve independence for the Caribbean island. Successive
PNP and JLP governments in the years after the war Levy claimed not to have read a book until she was 23 years
accelerated the process of decolonization. Jamaica gained old. A growing awareness of her identity as a black woman
more authority and administrative abilities if not outright was informed by a growing interest in literature. She read many
independence. The elections of pro-independence parties books written by black women from America but comparatively
gave the governments a mandate to push for independence, few from black British women. Levy began to write in her
and Jamaica became a fully independent nation in 1962. At the mid-30s. The death of her father prompted her to write as a
same time, Jamaica joined the Commonwealth of Nations means to better understand her origins and her identity. She
which is generally referred to as the Commonwealth. The took creative writing classes beginning in 1989 and wrote a
Commonwealth is a political association of 54 states who are novel, but she struggled to get it published. Levy was told that
all former members of the British Empire. The states involved her writing was too focused on race which made her book
share a common heritage and have their shared values difficult to market in a predominantly white country like Britain.
enshrined in the Commonwealth Charter. A regular
Commonwealth Games is held every four years as a Levy's first novel was titled Every Light in the House Burnin'
celebration of this shared heritage. (1994) and was well received. The book was the semi-
autobiographical story of a black girl growing up in London in
Characters in Small Island think about Jamaican independence the 1960s. Her second novel Never Far from Nowhere (1996)
though the period is not covered in the book. Jamaican men also drew on Levy's own experiences to tell the story of two
fight for Britain in World War II and then return home to find sisters of Jamaican heritage. The completion of Levy's second
many people already discussing the idea of independence for novel allowed her to visit Jamaica for the first time. There she
Jamaica. Gilbert hears the idea from his associates and is learned more about her family's history and used this research
interested. Bernard Bligh also encounters similar sentiments to write her third novel Fruit of the Lemon (1999). The novel
from an Indian perspective when he is abroad. He does not was just as well-received as her previous work and began to
believe that Indian people can govern themselves. His racist garner attention in the United States as well as Britain.
views reflect many of the contemporary sentiments about
Indian and Jamaican independence.
Small Island
a Author Biography Levy's fourth book was titled Small Island (2004). The novel
tells the story of Jamaican immigrants who struggle to come to
terms with the reality of racism in Great Britain in the 1940s.
Levy uses many details from her parents' lives and weaves
Early Life them into the narrative. A central character in the novel named
Gilbert Joseph sails on the same boat to Britain as Levy's
Andrea Levy was born in London on March 7, 1956. Her father
father and secures a job working for the post office. Similarly a
was a Jamaican man who sailed to Great Britain in 1948 and
character named Hortense trains to be a teacher in Jamaica
found a job with the post office. His wife joined him six months
only to be told that her qualifications are not recognized in
later and tried to find a job as a teacher only to be rejected by
Britain. The book is the most successful of Levy's career and
the British education system. Levy was the youngest of four
has won many awards which include The Whitbread Book of
children, and the family lived on a housing estate in London. At
the Year and the Commonwealth Writers Prize. The novel has
university Levy studied textile design and weaving before
also been adapted for the theatre and television.
beginning a career as a part-time costume assistant at the
Bernard Bligh
Bernard Bligh hates himself and is forced to watch as his worst
nightmares are realized. He works a dull job as a bank clerk
and then finds himself marrying a woman who uses him to
escape life on a farm. The marriage between Bernard and
Queenie is a loveless husk of passive-aggressive resentment.
Bernard sits in silence while Queenie purposely annoys him in
the hope that he might say anything to liven up their lives.
Bernard never says anything. He accepts the benign and dull
nature of their marriage but hates himself for not being able to
be a better husband or lover for Queenie. His failure to father a
child is another source of resentment, but he opts to blame
Queenie rather than himself. Bernard is also a committed
racist. He views non-white, non-British people as inherently
inferior morally and intellectually. He travels to India and tells
the local people as much, and he treats black Jamaican people
with open contempt. The mixed-race child his wife bears
reveals his failures as a husband, a lover, and a member of
society. Even though he grows to like the baby, Bernard is
never able to abandon his racism. He clings to his prejudice
because it is all he has left.
Character Map
Spouses
Gilbert Joseph
Charming, hapless Jamaican
man; dreams of a better life
Landlord Landlord
Spouses
Hortense Queenie
Bernard Bligh Empathetic, lonely
Polite, self-centered Jamaican
Timid, racist English bank working-class woman;
Landlord woman; wants to be a Landlord
clerk; joins the army wants to escape
teacher in England
life on a farm
Adopted siblings
Lovers
Michael Roberts
Handsome, wealthy Jamaican
man; clashes with his
traditional parents
Main Character
Minor Character
Miss Jewel is an elderly Jamaican woman Martha Roberts is a doting mother who
who takes a job in the Roberts household keeps her adopted daughter at a
Martha
Miss Jewel to be near her granddaughter Hortense. distance. Martha has no compunction
Roberts
She helps to raise Hortense but can only about openly stating her preference for
speak to her formally in public. her son Michael Roberts.
Climax
Bernard is not pleased that black people live in his house. He
wants to evict them immediately but is worried about
Queenie's cold reaction to his return. One day he breaks into
Gilbert and Hortense's room. They catch him, and a fight
erupts. Queenie tries to stop the fight, but the excitement
forces her to reveal that she is pregnant and about to give
birth. Gilbert and Bernard are locked out as Hortense helps
Queenie give birth. The baby is black. The father is Michael
Roberts who had returned to her after the war. They had spent
three passionate days together before he departed for
Canada.
Ending
Gilbert is offered a better job with better accommodation. He
and Hortense move out, but Queenie insists that they take her
baby because she cannot give the baby the life he deserves.
Bernard has grown affectionate toward the baby. Gilbert
pleads with an angry Bernard to abandon his racist views, but
Bernard refuses. Gilbert and Hortense accept Queenie's
proposal and leave the house with the baby to begin their new
life.
Plot Diagram
Climax
7
Falling Action
6
Rising Action
5 8
4
9
3
Resolution
2
1
Introduction
Rising Action
Climax
Timeline of Events
The mid-1920s
1948
1948
Now
Hours later
Days later
Chapter 1
existence of the contrasts will determine how much they can edges. The ease with which they deal with the contrast
succeed. between expectation and reality will lay the foundation for how
Gilbert and Hortense succeed in their new home. Hortense's
Queenie's experience is a formative moment in her life. She demand for good manners clashes with the reality of race
learns to contrast the facts of life as they are told to her by her relations in Great Britain, while Gilbert's lax attitude will make
elders and the facts of life as she experiences them. The success difficult to come by. Both characters have their hopes
adults who accompany her to the exhibition are uninformed and dreams, but life in Britain renders these hopes and dreams
and ill-experienced but they have plenty of ideas about non- somewhat moot. The contrast between expectation and reality
white people that they are happy to share. Queenie is still a affects every part of their lives from their actions to their
child and accepts these ideas because she has no reason not speech.
to trust adults. The handshake with the man at the African
exhibition tells her that the adults in her life might not be as
clever or as informed as she expected. Queenie has been told
that black people are uncivilized and unable to understand
Chapters 3–5
English. The man greets her with a pleasant smile and a cordial
handshake. His actions disprove the lessons that people have
tried to teach Queenie, and the contrast between expectation
Summary
and reality reveals to her that she should not take anything for
Chapter 3
granted. She will grow up to have radically different views on
race than many contemporary white British people.
Hortense grows up in Jamaica as the daughter of an important,
respected government official named Lovell Roberts. He meets
The contrast between Hortense and Gilbert is evident from
a poor woman from the country named Alberta Roberts who
their first interaction. Hortense is prim, proper, and desperate
gives birth to Hortense out of wedlock. Alberta is dark-skinned,
to appear well-mannered. She judges others who do not
but Hortense is light-skinned like her father so Alberta gives up
maintain the high standards she sets for herself. Gilbert is none
her baby to Lovell's cousins in the hope that Hortense will have
of these things. He is a lazy, charming, and easy-going
a better life. Hortense grows up in a rich family and receives an
individual. Gilbert makes friends easily while Hortense
education. Philip Roberts and Martha Roberts have lost two
struggles to be understood. The prose used throughout their
daughters of their own. They raise Hortense with their son
chapters indicates the way that they wish to be seen by the
Michael Roberts. Alberta goes to work in Cuba, but Hortense's
world. Hortense affects what she believes to be a proper
grandmother Miss Jewell is hired by the Roberts family as a
English tone and style while Gilbert speaks in more of a natural
nanny for Hortense and Michael. Michael is a mischievous boy
dialect. He does not change himself to accommodate the
and tempts her to play with him when she has chores to do. He
expectations of the white society, but Hortense alters her
is sent to a boarding school by his religious father. Hortense is
behavior in an acknowledgment of what she believes to be a
envious but stays with Miss Jewel and speaks about England.
well-mannered and respectable society. Hortense's
Hortense wants to speak like British royalty. Hortense finishes
affectations clash with her expected reality. The contrast
school and becomes a teaching assistant at a private school
between how she expects England to be and how it appears is
run by a white American couple. Michael returns home from
telling. Even the doorbell of her childhood dreams does not
boarding school a changed person, and Hortense falls
work. Gilbert's dark and untidy room is a horrifying realization
immediately in love. The grownup Michael quickly falls out with
of the reality of life in England. Hortense must deal with this
his religious father but flirts often with Hortense. He walks her
contrast if she is to succeed in her new life. Her expectations
to work each day. A hurricane hits Jamaica, and Michael and
of Britain and the reality of Britain are too different, and this
Hortense shelter together at her workplace with the American
upsets her. She runs from Gilbert's room, she runs from Gilbert,
woman Stella Ryder. Hortense is surprised by the close
and she lashes out at him. For all of Gilbert's failings, he
relationship between Stella and Michael as they hug together
manages to cope with the realities of life in Britain much better
tightly during the storm. The damage of the hurricane and the
than his wife. He lacks her strict, unwavering ideas of how
emotional pain of Michael's closeness to Stella turn Hortense's
people should act. Hortense is disgusted by bad manners, but
world upside down. Then she sees the dead body of Stella's
Gilbert is more naturally accommodating of society's rough
husband Charles Ryder. His car had crashed during the storm. spent her time since the end of the war waiting for Michael to
Rumors persist that Charles is having an affair with a local return, and she refuses to believe that he is dead. She tries to
woman, then Stella and Michael's affair is uncovered. Martha picture him in an airplane or England but can only see him in
beats Hortense and then collapses sobbing in a chair. Jamaica.
Hortense runs away and hides in the school. Stella Ryder
leaves the island, and the school closes. Michael flees to
England, and the Roberts family is never the same again. Analysis
Chapter 4 After a short prologue, the novel begins in 1948 when Hortense
arrives in London. The narrative switches back to a time
A few years after the hurricane, Hortense leaves for college.
labeled "before." This before time tells the story of Hortense's
Her adopted parents barely notice her departure, but Miss
youth. The structure of the novel switches back and forth
Jewel bids her farewell with a small amount of money wrapped
between the two time periods as the characters' pasts catch
in a white handkerchief. Hortense studies to become a teacher
up to their present. Hortense's youth explains her personality
with many other well-dressed, well-mannered girls from across
and behavior in 1948. Her well-mannered and occasionally
Jamaica. Their teachers are white women led by an
pretentious attitudes can be traced back to her peculiar
intimidating principal named Miss Morgan. Hortense still
upbringing. She feels obliged to behave well and to chastise
dreams about Michael but is interrupted by Celia Langley who
Gilbert for his bad behavior because she was trained to be a
drags her out of bed and into a group shower where all the
teacher. Hortense's relationship with Gilbert now reads more
students strip naked and stand under the cold water each
like the relationship between a teacher and a disobedient
morning. Hortense and Celia become good friends. Celia
student than the relationship between a husband and a wife.
teaches Hortense about the school, the lessons, and the staff.
The role of Celia in informing Hortense's desire to move to
Hortense excels in her lessons and begins teaching large
England also becomes clear. Celia's descriptions of England
classes of poor students whom she struggles to control. Celia
are previewed in the opening lines of the text through
and Hortense become fascinated by the local military training
Hortense's flashback and then seen in their proper setting.
academy. Jamaican men are being trained to be part of
Celia dreams of a house in England with a doorbell, and
Britain's Royal Air Force to fight in World War II (1939–45).
Hortense sets out to achieve this dream. She is confronted
Women in the streets weep as the men depart for war. Celia
with the reality of the situation and has to deal with the squalid
reveals that she dreams of living in England. She is
conditions whereas Celia's dreams can remain dreams. The
embarrassed when a strangely-dressed woman joins Celia and
structure of the novel heightens the contrasts between the
Hortense in the street to watch the men. Hortense realizes that
present and the events of the past that brought the characters
this woman is Celia's mother, and she helps to escort the
up to this moment in time.
erratic woman home. Hortense worries that she will get into
trouble for being part of an embarrassing scene especially Hortense's relationship with Michael also helps to explain her
when Miss Morgan calls Hortense into her office. Hortense relationship with Gilbert. Michael was an ideal figure in
receives a message from Martha Roberts to say that Michael's Hortense's mind. He was well-read, well-educated, well-
plane has disappeared. Hortense is heartbroken. mannered, attractive, and from a good family. She grew up
alongside Michael, but his experiences at boarding school
Chapter 5
transformed him into a man she could love. Her unrequited love
Years later and after the war, Hortense sees a young man in for Michael is almost childlike in its purity. Their relationship is
the street who looks like Michael. She chases him through the based on light flirting and spending time together without much
crowds. A fight breaks out in the crowd, and Hortense is hint of sexuality. Hortense believes herself to be in love but is
knocked to the ground. A man carries her to safety, and she never able to confirm this. The town is hit with scandal, and
realizes that he is the person she mistook for Michael. This Michael's rumored relationship with Stella Ryder provides
person bears very little resemblance to Michael. He warns her Hortense with a glimpse into a world of sexuality and lust that
against attending the kind of "meeting" that occupies the she does not understand. The upstanding son of a local
attention of the crowd. Hortense asks to be left alone. She has powerful family and the American evangelical head of a school
seem an unlikely pairing. Until the hurricane hits, Hortense
Chapter 8
landlady cooks her food, tells her stories, and asks her probing ruthless efficiency. Celia becomes a victim of this ruthlessness
questions. Hortense tolerates the woman in the knowledge while Gilbert becomes embroiled in Hortense's scheme. The
that she is leaving for England the next day. The woman helps overly polite woman of the early novel is revealed to have a
Hortense pack and gives her a blanket she knitted throughout mercilessness and heartlessness that drives her forward
the war. Gilbert has written regularly from England, but the through life. The way Hortense balances this relentless
woman cautions Hortense that "these young men have urges." efficiency with the actual affections and emotions she
develops dictates whether her time in England is a success.
Gilbert and Celia are primed to be victims in Hortense's
Analysis ruthless quest for happiness even if this quest might ultimately
be fruitless.
The marriage between Hortense and Gilbert Joseph is
revealed as a marriage of convenience. They spend a total of
five days engaged and one night together as husband and wife Chapters 9–11
before Gilbert departs for England. The marriage is more of an
investment than a romantic endeavor. Hortense views Gilbert
as a man who can help her ambitions come true. She wants to
move to England so she loans Gilbert the money required for
Summary
the boat trip. She needs a husband because she does not want
Chapter 9
to travel as an unmarried woman. Hortense's preconceptions
of the world undermine her ability to achieve her ambitions in In 1948 Queenie is told by her neighbor Cyril Todd that
this respect. Many unmarried men and women take the boat, "colored people" are coming to Britain to take advantage of the
but Hortense has to invest in a husband before she can do so. health services. Todd is a nosy person who notices Hortense's
The marriage of convenience allows Hortense to skirt her arrival and immediately voices his concerns about immigrants.
desperate need to maintain appearances. She will travel as a He has a long history of complaining about immigrants,
married woman even if her marriage is an elaborate sham. especially because Queenie has no qualms about renting
Hortense knows what she wants, and she knows how to seize rooms to non-white people. Queenie has known Gilbert since
it. his first wartime trip to Britain. Gilbert is present at what she
refers to as "the incident," but she has not wanted to talk to
The relationship between Celia Langley and Hortense comes
him since the end of the war. Her husband Bernard Bligh has
to a grinding halt. The two have been together since the day
not returned from his posting, though the military insists that
Hortense arrived at the college. Celia has offered her advice
he is not dead. Rumors have spread that Bernard has run away
and guidance to Hortense at every stage of Hortense's career,
or taken a hit to the head. When Gilbert arrives looking for a
but this is not enough. In a pique of envy and bitterness,
room, Queenie takes him in because she knows that Bernard
Hortense reveals the truth about Celia's mother to Gilbert.
would not approve. She knows Bernard is a virulent racist.
Celia punches Hortense in the head and then a short time later
Queenie rents more rooms to more immigrants, and her furious
Hortense marries Celia's ex-boyfriend. Hortense's
neighbors sell their houses.
determination to be well-mannered and polite can be
undermined. She is envious of Celia's boyfriend and their Chapter 10
dreams to move to England so she steals Celia's boyfriend,
and she steals Celia's dreams. Hortense forces Gilbert Joseph to sleep in the old armchair in
the room while she takes the bed. She also makes him turn his
While Celia felt a real affection for Gilbert, Hortense came to a back while she changes into her nightclothes, but she catches
business relationship with him. The disintegration of the him peeking twice. The sound of mice in the rafters keeps
friendship between the two women reveals that they are too Hortense awake, and she does not appreciate Gilbert joking
dissimilar to be true friends. Celia is a romantic whereas about the matter. He throws his shoe at the ceiling and
Hortense is relentlessly practical. Hortense seizes her promises that "it will all be different in the morning."
opportunity and pays the cost of her friendship to Celia. Once
Hortense sets her sights on a goal, she moves toward it with Chapter 11
During the war Gilbert is proud of his Air Force uniform. He men and women from Jamaica allows Queenie to exercise this
does not expect to miss food more than women while he is small amount of power. This decision is a rebuke to men like
deployed in America, but the quality of the military rations Todd and Bernard, and it functions as an altruistic gesture
makes him regret his enlistment. The unit arrives in Virginia in made for slightly less altruistic reasons. Queenie is not
the United States and rations immediately improve. The men necessarily racist, but she is willing to look beyond racism to
are confined to the military camp to avoid "contracting a assert herself in a society in which she is marginalized.
disease," but the men are upset because they know that this
means no female interaction. Gilbert thinks about "the white Gilbert's military career takes him around the world. He travels
man's war" in which he has become embroiled. He is both black from Jamaica to the United States and Great Britain. The
and the son of a Jewish man so reflects that the anti-Semitic journey outside Jamaica reveals the importance the world
Nazi party that rules Germany would consider him to be doubly places on his race. Gilbert has always been an outsider in a
primitive. His father converted to Christianity during World War racial sense. He is part Jamaican and part Jewish. This
I (1914–18) and then became a furniture salesman. Gilbert's complicated lineage has been a part of his life but rarely the
cousin Elwood advises Gilbert that he should be fighting defining factor. Gilbert is like most men in Jamaica, and his
against the British for Jamaican independence rather than Jewish heritage is a minor part of his identity. Gilbert discovers
fighting for them. Gilbert wonders whether he and his fellow that these nuances are flattened in the United States and
Caribbean Air Force enlistees would be attacked by the locals Britain. In predominantly white countries, he is treated solely as
if they left the base. The unit boards a ship ready to sail back a black person. People do not care that he is specifically
to Britain via Canada. A white English corporal belittles and Jamaican or that he has a Jewish heritage. He is grouped into
patronizes them as "colony troops." the same demographic as every single person from the
Caribbean. For all of Gilbert's thoughts about "small islanders"
and the nuances of Jamaican and Jewish identity, the wider
Analysis whiter world does not care. Gilbert is reduced to a single skin
color and a single broad race. The nuances of his identity are
The novel moves in perspective away from Hortense and taken from him.
toward the people in her life. The narrative examines the way
Queenie is affected by her decision to take in non-white
lodgers, and then the narrative traces the history of Gilbert Chapters 12–14
Joseph and his military career. Queenie and Gilbert share a
history, but the novel doesn't reveal it to the reader until the full
context is available. Summary
Queenie's decision to take in non-white and non-British
Chapter 12
lodgers does not make her a popular person in her
neighborhood. The decision is not entirely altruistic. Cyril Todd Gilbert Joseph and the other recruits train in Yorkshire,
is a prying racist who lives next door. He is seemingly polite England, based at a holiday camp. The Jamaican recruits do
and friendly, but his good nature masks a fear of other races. not appreciate the cold weather, and they loathe the white
He chides Queenie gently at first for her decision, and then this British staff who train them. Gilbert and his fellow recruits
gentle chiding evolves into blatant hostility. Todd is not a nice explore a nearby village during their day off. They notice that
person, but his racism is one facet of his multifaceted and very the residents are all staring at them. Eventually the hesitation
flawed personality rather than his defining feature. Todd is also of the villagers breaks, and the men from the Caribbean are
not alone. Queenie knows that Bernard is even more racist greeted with some degree of warmth and novelty. Gilbert
than Todd, and she feels hurt by his failure to return from the explains that the relationship between Britain and the colonies
war. Queenie's decision to rent rooms to non-white lodgers is is like having a distant relative whom people are taught to love.
partly grounded in her desire to annoy people like Bernard and Finally meeting this distant relative is nothing but a
Todd. Queenie lacks much agency in society. She is not a war disappointment. Britain and its people are a disappointment for
widow, and she is not rich. The single vector of power she has the recruits who have been taught to revere the colonial power
is deciding who rents the rooms in her house. Renting rooms to
their entire lives. For all that the Jamaicans have been taught people but is astonished to learn about the very different strain
about Britain, the British know nothing about Jamaica. of racism that affects the American black soldiers. The
contrasts between these different treatments help Gilbert to
Chapter 13 form a better understanding of the way racism manifests in
different societies.
Gilbert is asked whether he can drive a car. He lies and says
that he cannot because he joined the Air Force to escape dull, Britain is a racist country, but many of its inhabitants are
menial roles such as driving. His mother ran a cake-baking pleasant enough. Gilbert describes a trip to a small town. The
business behind the back of his alcoholic father. Gilbert drove white British people stare at Gilbert and his fellow black
the delivery van from a young age. The business was recruits. The awkwardness eventually breaks down, and many
successful enough to send Gilbert to a private college, and he of the townspeople shake Gilbert's hand and ask the recruits
believes that this education lifted him above the role of the about their home countries. The people are polite and friendly,
delivery driver. He wanted to be the radio operator on a plane but their questions and lines of inquiry are shot through with a
so Gilbert insists that he does not know how to drive. Many lack of understanding. The patronizing tone taken by these
recruits see their hopes of glamorous roles dashed as they are people treats the recruits like they are a passing novelty. Post-
reassigned to menial jobs. Gilbert is sent to be a driver, and he war reactions of men like Cyril Todd are evidence that the
remembers his cousin Elwood telling him that "the English are attitudes of British people will change. The novelty of the black
liars." people in Britain will evaporate, and the patronizing tone will
change into one of outright hostility. Gilbert's experiences
Chapter 14
traveling from Jamaica to America to wartime Britain and then
Gilbert is given a job where he delivers coal in freezing to post-war Britain create a diagram of evolving and
conditions. He is sent to retrieve an order for airplane parts contrasting race relations.
from an American army base in England after a delivery
The visit to the American base provides Gilbert with an
mistake. The Americans treat him strangely when he arrives.
example of forthright racism. He overhears the American
Black people are not allowed on the base, and they believe
officers explicitly state that they cannot allow him on the base
Gilbert has been sent to mock them. The Americans offer to
because of the color of his skin. They believe that he has been
give Gilbert food and then send him back empty-handed.
sent to them as a joke. His skin color is reduced to a tool for
Gilbert eats his meal and reflects on the Americans' attitude
mocking, and Gilbert begins to understand that his race is a
toward black people. He knows he has been used and lied to.
joke to the British officers and an outright offense to the
Gilbert leaves and spots two black American soldiers while
American officers. Neither group of white people views him as
driving his truck. They hitch a lift on the truck as Gilbert drives
a person. The attitudes of the American officers are confirmed
back to the British base in the dark. The Americans explain
by Gilbert's interactions with the black American troops. They
that they are on leave for the first time in months and have
explain how entire cities in Britain are segregated for American
arranged to meet two women in Nottingham. They talk about
soldiers. American troops can only take their leave in certain
the careful way the American army segregates white troops
cities as dictated by their race and a strict schedule. The men
from non-white troops. Black soldiers can only visit certain
are traveling to Nottingham because Nottingham has
towns at certain times to keep them away from white soldiers.
temporarily been declared the city for black recruits. White
The Americans reflect on racial segregation in America and
recruits are sent to a different city. This rotating schedule
wonder whether it will soon "have to change." Gilbert drops the
illustrates the administrative and bureaucratic dedication to
men at their stop. They leave behind six packets of cigarettes
segregation. Americans are committed to separating the races
as a gesture of their appreciation.
even when they are stationed in another country. The racism of
the Americans transcends borders, and they export their
racist attitudes will be reflected in those of the British people leave. He spots Arthur through the window. Queenie runs out
after the war who consider the idea of black people living next to Arthur, and Gilbert pays the waitress. He makes sure to
door as being worse than anything that might have happened leave a large tip. The waitress notices the Americans preparing
had they lost World War II (1939–45). to follow Gilbert out the door and distracts them while Gilbert
slips out. He waves at the men and joins Queenie and Arthur
on a trip to the movie theatre.
Chapters 15–17 Chapter 17
the waitress intervenes. The threat of violence as a result of moment that a white man is affected, the white participants in
racism is not realized. The riot takes place only a short time the riot take notice. The death of a white man as a result of
later. The same sentiments and prejudices linger in the racism makes the authorities take the issue far more seriously.
community. The incident in the cinema is too sprawling to The seriousness with which they treat the murder reveals the
control. Gilbert's cause becomes about more than just his inherent structural racism in a society that places more value
insistence on sitting anywhere. The tea shop threat is limited to on the life of a white man than the lives of many black people.
Gilbert while the fight in the cinema occurs in the presence of
other black men. Their presence raises the stakes of the fight.
Gilbert is no longer alone in a technical sense, but he feels Chapters 18–20
alone. He only wants to watch the film. He does not feel the
need to battle against racism. The other patrons in the cinema
take up his fight on his behalf. As he wanders through the
Summary
street afterward, Gilbert sees the consequences of the fight
against racism. Blood is sprayed across the street, and the
Chapter 18
authorities only seek to discipline the black men. There is no
justice or any attempt to resolve the racist motivations of the In 1947 the war is over. Gilbert Joseph returns to Jamaica. A
fight. The riot portrays the violent consequences of the racism cheering crowd welcomes the soldiers' boat into the harbor.
Gilbert has experienced throughout the novel while also Gilbert still carries the newspaper clipping containing the story
illustrating the ease with which a minor disagreement can erupt of the death of Arthur Bligh. The story claims that the soldiers'
into a large-scale and bloody assault. anger stemmed from the cinema's projector breaking. A bullet
had been fired to quell the crowd and mistakenly hit Arthur.
Gilbert argues with the usher about his seat in the cinema, and
The story does not mention race. Gilbert had been sent to
Queenie joins in the argument. Gilbert appreciates her efforts
Cornwall in the south of England the day after the shooting.
but notes that she approaches the issue from the wrong angle.
This was followed by stints in Scotland, Filey, and Cornwall
Queenie frames the issue as though it is a matter of whom she
again. Queenie had moved to London and never responded to
would prefer to sit next to. She offers to seat Gilbert between
his letters. Gilbert feels that Jamaica now feels like a small
her and Arthur so that no white person will be forced to sit
island rather than home. His family members are scattered and
next to a black person. This argument frames the solution on
successful. Gilbert had tried to study law while in England, but
racist terms. Queenie's solution inherently acknowledges that
his application was rejected. Elwood's various businesses have
there may be an issue with someone who might not wish to sit
all failed, and he is now focused on the idea of Jamaican
next to a black person while ignoring the crux of the issue. Her
independence from the British Empire. He convinces Gilbert to
solution is practical and well-meaning while missing Gilbert's
invest in a business idea involving bees and honey. They fail as
point. He argues that there should be no objection to sitting
beekeepers when their stubborn mule kicks down most of their
next to a person of another race so he should be able to sit
hives. They produce hardly any honey. Gilbert sees no future
where he wants. Queenie means well but struggles to
on the island and sets his hopes on returning to England.
understand racism in anything other than a practical way. This
Elwood disagrees. Most people think Gilbert is an over-
attitude is reflected in her post-war interactions with Gilbert.
ambitious dreamer, but Celia Langley believes in him. Hortense
These interactions indicate that she has no issue with non-
looks down on Gilbert so he is shocked when she offers him
white people, but she struggles to overcome the racial
the money to move back to England. He weeps alone before
segregation that has been pressed into her mind by white
he accepts her offer. He sees no other way off the island.
society.
Chapter 19
The death of Arthur Bligh shows that racism is not just an issue
that affects black people. Black people are beaten and bruised Gilbert takes up Hortense's offer and arrives back in Britain. He
throughout the fight, but the moment that makes people take knows the city so considers himself different from the other
notice is when a white man is shot dead. The death of Arthur is Jamaican men who are seeing London for the first time. When
more of a shocking moment than the pain and suffering of the he finds a brooch on the ground, he takes this as an auspicious
black people as well as the inherent racism of the incident. The sign. The brooch vanishes before he can pick it up, and he
realizes that it was nothing more than a "cluster of flies caught is a sacrifice he makes to become the man he wants to be.
by the light." He stays in a room with many other Jamaican men
and becomes acquainted with their bad habits. The room is his Even when Gilbert arrives in London and stays in a room with
home for two months. Gilbert decides he needs somewhere other Jamaican men he still sees himself as different. The
better to live, but very few landlords are willing to rent to black Jamaican men who arrive on the docks have no experience in
people. He remembers the address written on the first note Britain, and they wonder about every little detail. They are
given to him by Arthur Bligh. It is the same address to which he amateurs compared to Gilbert. He sees himself as a
had sent his unanswered letters to Queenie. He takes a knowledgeable and informed participant in British society.
chance and knocks on the door. After a moment of uncertainty, Gilbert creates a niche for his identity that is halfway between
Queenie recognizes him. British and Jamaican. In the same way that his Jewish heritage
means people will never regard him as entirely black, his race
Chapter 20 means that he can never be British, and his experience in
Britain means that he can never be Jamaican again. Gilbert
In 1948 Hortense complains that Gilbert has woken her up in a exists at the crossroads of identity and struggles to know the
rude fashion. He is up early to go to work, and he offers to correct path forward.
make her tea. The room is so cold she can see her breath as a
"curtain of vapor." She is shocked that the sun does not rise Hortense has a similar ambition to leave the island. Her desire
early in the winter. Gilbert says that he will return later and to leave Jamaica is based on an idyllic version of Britain that
asks her to cook him something from the meager ingredients in she has built up in her mind. She views British society as polite,
the corner of the room. She takes pity on him and agrees to well-mannered, and civil. The reality of what Hortense
cook. experiences clashes with her expectations, and she begins to
realize that British society is not what she once thought it was.
Even the weather is against her. Hortense finds herself in a
Analysis hostile environment where the sun does not rise, and the air is
so cold that it turns her breath to vapor. The contrast between
Gilbert's descriptions of life in Jamaica make the island sound this freezing form of existence and life in Jamaica could not be
like a prison. His desperation to escape and return to England starker. Just as Gilbert is willing to endure racism in return for
explains his quick acceptance of Hortense's offer of marriage the potential that Britain offers to his ambitions, Hortense is
and a loan. The plan is not ideal for Gilbert, and he spends a willing to endure the conditions to find the polite and well-
night weeping quietly to himself about the amount of freedom mannered society of which she has always dreamed.
he will have to surrender to make the deal, but he accepts
nevertheless. Life outside of Jamaica becomes an obsession
for Gilbert in a way that makes any price seem reasonable. Chapters 21–23
Even the racism and the abuse that he has suffered while
abroad is no match for the limitations he feels have been
placed on his ambitions by the island of Jamaica. Earlier in the
novel, Gilbert was made to appear like a charming dreamer
Summary
whose big ambitions were empty and fleeting. The chapters
Chapter 21
from his perspective reveal that there is an integrity to his
ambition that is lost on others. Gilbert is not just a failure who In 1948 Gilbert readies himself for work and creeps out of the
struggles to maintain a job or find his niche in society. He is a house. He has learned to sneak quietly through the building so
person who has seen the world and now cannot return to the as not to wake Queenie. She hears him nevertheless. Since
small-scale existence he once knew. Gilbert is desperate to Gilbert returned to England, he has noticed a change in his
make something of himself, and his ambition is such that he relationship with Queenie. The rent she charges is higher than
believes his dreams need a grand stage on which to be he expected, and she complains about people making noise.
realized. Jamaica is not that stage, but Britain just might be. His She relies on Gilbert to pass along her messages to the other
acceptance of Hortense's offer is not the action of a conman lodgers and to "keep them all under control." On this particular
seizing on a rare opportunity. His decision to accept her offer morning, she passes along a similar message and asks to
speak to him about one more thing. Gilbert insists that he is unemployed men and their families. One day she sees her
late for work and leaves before she can reveal what she is father in the butchering shed and faints. After that she refuses
talking about. to eat meat and becomes a vegetarian. The decision infuriates
her father, and Queenie is eventually sent to live with her Aunt
Chapter 22 Dorothy in London.
non-racist proposition. Hortense is horrified. Queenie's member of a successful family. Queenie goes against
comment is a tacit acceptance of the boundaries of racial Dorothy's advice and tries to break up with Bernard. He begins
differences. She acknowledges that society has an issue with to cry and begs her for another chance. The mention of
racism and has learned to operate within the racist boundaries. engagement catches Queenie's attention, and she agrees to
The casual assurance that she does not mind being seen with give him another chance. The next time they go for a walk, they
Hortense suggests that Queenie accepts other people's views return to find Dorothy dead in the candy store. Bernard fetches
that there might be an issue with this. help while Queenie is in a daze. Queenie's family travels to
London for the funeral. Queenie announces that she has
Racism has become like the weather to Queenie. The prospect accepted Bernard's proposal so as not to return home to the
of racist comments being made in public is like rain to her. She farm.
prepares for these comments and accepts that they exist
naturally within society. Hortense asks herself "why should this Chapter 25
woman worry to be seen in the street with me." Hortense
considers herself to be of a better class than Queenie. She is Queenie and Bernard marry. Their sexual relationship is
an educated and well-mannered teacher while Queenie merely unsatisfying and dull even though Queenie tries to excite her
lets rooms in a house and has a rude attitude. The casual husband. She visits the doctor and asks about pregnancy. The
nature with which Queenie reiterates her higher social class doctor tells her that she is unlikely to get pregnant unless she
reveals to Hortense that race rather than manners, education, enjoys sex with her husband. Bernard has told her that he
or upbringing is the most important element of identity. This would like a child so Queenie takes her inability to get pregnant
perspective is imposed on Hortense by society, and she never as a personal failure. She cries whenever her period comes.
expected this to be the case. Queenie's casual acceptance of They live in a large house with Arthur Bligh who is Bernard's
the existence of racism in society reveals that she believes father. They spend time in only a few rooms some of which are
herself to be inherently more important than Hortense. This is rented out to lodgers. Bernard tells Queenie that she does not
a revelation for Hortense and illustrates how much she still has need to work so she dedicates her free time to restoring the
to learn about British society. vivacity of the house and cleaning its empty rooms. Bernard is
reluctant to use these restored rooms and cites his secretive
"reasons" when asked why.
they're worth," and the German lodger is taken away by the relationship with Bernard. The marriage is revealed to be a dull,
police the next day. The bombing raids in London are terrifying, loveless, and passive-aggressive arrangement that does not
and Arthur's mental health begins to break down. Queenie and suit either party. Bernard is the first man the inexperienced
Bernard sit alone together in the cramped shelter. Arthur young Queenie dates, and the death of Aunt Dorothy leaves
refuses to come inside. Bernard becomes friendlier with the Queenie without guidance. She accepts Bernard's half-made
neighbor Cyril Todd. They share their racist opinions and proposal because she does not want to return to life on the
resent the working-class people who move into houses nearby. farm. The situational irony of Queenie's decision is that she
Queenie takes pity on the bedraggled family that moves in swaps one oppressive environment for another. Life on the
nearby. Bernard and Queenie become increasingly nervous farm was grueling, and Queenie resented the proximity to
and panicked by the bombing raids. Bernard is convinced that blood and sweat. Life with Bernard is crushingly dull, and
a bomb has fallen on the house and killed his father. He clings Queenie resents the proximity to her husband. Their sex life is
to her as she checks on the house from the shelter. A bomb nonexistent, and their failure to conceive is subtly blamed on
destroys the house where the bedraggled family has been Queenie. Bernard does not talk, does not engage with her, and
staying. Queenie takes sympathy on the family and begs cannot even bring himself to argue with her. She starts to
Bernard to let them move in. He refuses to let them stay for annoy him intentionally to provoke a reaction. Queenie lusts
more than a day so she takes them to an emergency center. after excitement so much that she tries to goad Bernard into a
Queenie takes a job at the center to try and help people. fight just to liven up their marriage. He does not rise to the
challenge. Queenie continues to knit the same item over and
over again. When it is done, she unravels the stitching and
Analysis begins again. The finished garment is not the desired goal of
the knitting process. The aim is to taunt Bernard into a reaction
The story of Queenie's marriage to Bernard Bligh provides an so she repeats the process endlessly until she is interrupted by
explanation for her friendship with Gilbert and echoes many of the war.
Hortense's experiences growing up. Queenie is raised on a
farm and covets an education. Her horror at the reality of the The outbreak of World War II (1939–45) reveals Bernard's
inside of the butcher's shed prompts her to become a petty malice. He lacks pity and empathy for anyone, and his
vegetarian. This decision is so extreme for the daughter of a racism becomes acutely noticeable. A Jewish refugee who
butcher that she is sent to London to live with her aunt. rents a room in their house becomes a target for this racism.
Queenie prefers the lifestyle in London. She is not stuck Bernard calls the authorities and has the man taken away on
cleaning chicken sheds and performing manual labor. This the possibility that he might be a German spy. He tells himself
preference mirrors that of Hortense. The lessons Queenie that the move is morally correct and his patriotic duty, but
receives in how to remove her working-class accent and Queenie is shocked by the lack of empathy. A working-class
behave in polite society reflect Hortense's education. In the London family moves into the neighborhood after their own
future Hortense considers Queenie to be blunt and ill- home is bombed, and they also attract Bernard's ire. Bernard
mannered. She is not aware that Queenie has endured many of and Cyril Todd judge the poor people from afar. When their
the same lessons in etiquette that Hortense received in temporary home is also bombed, Bernard refuses to allow the
Jamaica. The experiences of the two women are very similar, family to stay in one of the many empty rooms in his house.
but the lessons have faded by the time they meet. The shared This refusal coupled with Queenie's passive-aggressive
point of history that both women can refer to is more recent taunting of her husband explains her relationship with Gilbert.
for Hortense. Queenie has been marked by life. The gap She is happy to befriend anyone who annoys Bernard. She
between the polite and educated young woman and the rents out rooms in her homes because she knows that Bernard
middle-aged landlord is stark. The working-class farm girl will disapprove. Whenever Todd complains about Gilbert or any
becomes a polite young lady who then becomes a jaded and other lodger, Queenie takes pleasure in knowing that she has
lonely woman. Hortense only knows the jaded Queenie, but the acted in such a way as to annoy her husband. Her friendship
backstory reveals a version of Queenie with whom Hortense with Gilbert is not necessarily about warmth and affection. The
could have been friends. founding principle of many of her actions is a passive-
aggressive symbolic slap across her husband's face. She does
The jaded future Queenie is explained partly by her
not rent rooms to black people because she is not racist or around. Arthur and Queenie become close. He agrees to rent
because she feels empathy for the way they are treated by out the empty rooms in the house to soldiers. Queenie is
society. Queenie is so jaded by her marriage to Bernard that shocked to find that one of the soldiers is black. His name is
she is willing to overcome her inherent racism to annoy her Michael Roberts. Queenie finds Michael charming and strange
husband. Queenie's anti-racism is not altruistic or benevolent in equal measure. They bond. On Michael's last night he shares
as much as it is passive-aggressive. rations with Queenie and plays cards with Arthur who cheats
continuously. Queenie catches herself staring at him as Arthur
departs with Michael's coins. Michael invites Queenie to sit
Chapters 27–29 with him and ask the questions she has been thinking ever
since they met. They sit beside one another, and Michael
whispers in Queenie's ear and caresses her hair.
Summary Chapter 29
Chapter 27 Queenie and Michael have sex. She almost believes that
someone else is with Michael as "Mrs. Queenie Bligh ... wasn't
In 1939 Queenie watches the masses of blood-soaked,
even there." Michael leaves early in the morning, and Arthur
smoldering people who arrive at the emergency center. They
discovers a wallet Michael has left behind. Inside are family
have lost everything to the bombing raids. She works 12-hour
photographs. Worried that the wallet is a good luck charm,
shifts and comes home to hear Bernard complain that she has
Queenie rushes to the station to return it to Michael. An
not cleaned or cooked dinner. He says that he worries about
explosion near the station nearly kills Queenie. She lies on the
her. Queenie is more worried about the dazed, confused, and
destroyed street and tries to take everything in. A stranger
broken people who file through the center. Her days off are
helps her toward an ambulance past severed arms and dead
filled with domestic chores, and she struggles to sleep more
bodies. The hospital treats her cracked ribs and sprained wrist.
than an hour before the bombing begins again. She begins to
People tell Queenie that she is lucky. At home Arthur helps her.
sleep at the center to save time. The bureaucracy and the
She remembers someone calling her name right before the
administrative work at the center are almost impossible for
blast but cannot remember who. Arthur helps her to bed and
people who have lost everything so Queenie cannot feel sorry
leans in close as though he is about to kiss her. He whispers to
for herself. Her job mostly consists of telling people which
her that he would die "if anything happened" to her. Queenie is
papers to file and which offices to visit to replace everything
shocked. She begs him to say more, but he kisses her on the
that has been destroyed. Delivering bad news about missed
forehead. Queenie sobs alone in the bed as Arthur sits in a
deadlines and incorrectly filed paperwork hurts her. She gives
chair beside her.
away her clothes and furniture to poor people. Bernard is livid.
Queenie accidentally accuses him of not doing his part in the
war effort. He slinks away in shame, and Queenie continues
Analysis
with her charity.
also reveals Queenie's willingness to rent rooms to black men legacy of a sprained wrist and a few broken ribs. The night with
and her friendship with Gilbert. Queenie meets Gilbert when he Michael lays the foundation for a life-altering change in attitude
is a member of the Royal Air Force. His uniform is the same as toward non-white people and a life chasing after an illicit
Michael's as is his race and country of origin. Queenie's moment of excitement that can never be recaptured.
friendship with Gilbert and her willingness to rent rooms to
Jamaican men are an attempt to recapture one night of
passion that she experienced years before. She does not want Chapters 30–32
to sleep with every man who passes through her door, but their
presence reminds her of a moment in her life when she was
almost happy. Given the nature of her relationship with her
Summary
family and husband, this desperate attempt to reclaim a
moment of fleeting joy becomes more understandable.
Chapter 30
imagines his friends back home mocking him for his cold and him paying her rent every month. Gilbert only encounters
impoverished existence in Britain. All of his Jamaican friends people who want something from him so the interaction with
from the military have endured similar racist incidents in Britain. the woman on the street stuns him. The woman shows him an
He walks through the streets thinking about his regret. A act of empathy, and Gilbert turns this around and shows
middle-aged white woman calls out to him and presents a lost empathy to Hortense.
glove. Gilbert does not remember dropping a glove, but he
takes it out of politeness. She offers him candy and notices Gilbert begins to teach Hortense about life in England. His first
that he has been crying. He assures her that he is fine, and she two lessons are important. The first lesson reveals the true
leaves. Gilbert stands in the street clutching the candy and nature of the British chip. The second lesson reveals that the
appreciating the act of kindness. The gesture makes him myths about England need to be abandoned. These lessons
reflect on his present state. He purchases two portions of fish provide sustenance and knowledge for Hortense. The chip is
and chips and takes it back to the room to share with an insight into her husband's expectations and an introduction
Hortense. He shows her a real chip and reveals to her the to British culture. The revelation that "not everything the
secret that "not everything the English do is good." English do is good" helps her to overcome the preconceptions
she has about Britain being a land of polite, friendly people.
Gilbert shares his food, and he shares his knowledge. Gilbert
Analysis makes the first move and begins to reveal to Hortense the
reality of life in Britain. The marriage's success depends on a
The narrative returns to 1948 as Gilbert Joseph and Hortense shared empathy if it is going to succeed, and Hortense must
wrestle with their first real experience of married life. Their quickly come to terms with the practical nature of life in a
domestic situation is complicated by their environment. The country that is very different from anything she ever imagined.
cold, small room is barely big enough for one person. After a Gilbert is no longer just a husband of convenience. He is now
long day of enduring racist treatment at work, Gilbert arrives her guide.
home and collapses in his chair. He does not have the time or
energy to notice Hortense's hard work and mocks her for her
inability to cook British food. The tension between them Chapters 33–35
emerges because they do not understand one another's
situation. Hortense does not realize the pains Gilbert has
endured to find a job while Gilbert does not notice the hard Summary
work Hortense has put into making their small room more
pleasant. This lack of understanding festers until it erupts and Chapter 33
an argument breaks out. Theirs is a marriage of mutual
convenience rather than compassion, love, or affection. Gilbert In 1948 Hortense gets to know Queenie better. They visit the
and Hortense have entered into a business arrangement more local shops together, and Hortense is appalled by Queenie's
than anything else so their lack of understanding is based on ugly coat. Hortense has dressed up for the occasion which she
the particular nature of their marriage. Until they learn to believes is polite. They leave the house, and Hortense
empathize with one another, they cannot hope to endure each discovers that everyone is dressed in the same ugly, drab
other's presence. coats. She is interested in the different hair, skin colors, and
eye colors English people seem to possess. Queenie mistakes
Gilbert is inspired to be empathetic by an encounter with a Hortense's fascination with her surroundings for a lack of
woman on the street. The random act of kindness involves a familiarity with the idea of a shop. Hortense is disgusted that
white stranger offering Gilbert a piece of candy and then the shopkeeper touches her bread with bare hands. Queenie
leaving. The interaction is pure in its simplicity. The woman ignores, patronizes, or misinterprets almost everything
does not expect anything in return for her kindness which Hortense says. English people stare at Hortense and shout
provides Gilbert with a human interaction that is not racial slurs at her in the street. Queenie tells her to ignore
transactional. He endures racism at work because he needs to these people. Queenie explains manners to Hortense which
get paid. He endures Hortense's criticisms because she loaned includes the notion that she should step into the road if an
him money. Even his friendship with Queenie is now based on
English person approaches on the sidewalk because she is "a shopkeeper touches her bread with his bare hands. Queenie
visitor to this country." Hortense is shocked. They arrive back assumes that Hortense's reluctance to take the bread is due to
at the house, and Queenie is shocked to see a man at the door. her unfamiliarity with the idea of a shop. For all of Hortense's
She thinks the man is Bernard Bligh. revulsion at the reality of English life, Queenie's latent racism
ensures that the racist society is the single constant
Chapter 34 throughout Hortense's experiences. Queenie and every other
English person have preconceptions about black people's
Queenie reveals that she can recognize the back of Bernard's
inability to function in society. Their expectations are shown to
neck anywhere. Bernard approaches her on the street. She
be as shallow and as misinformed as those of Hortense. Every
tells him that he has been away for a long time. All he says in
character in the novel has prejudices and preconceptions that
response is "indeed." She demands an explanation for why he
are confounded and proved wrong.
has been away for five years.
in the jungle for the night. Bernard did not bring a blanket. wheel, but the sound of gunfire hurries them onto the truck.
Before he can decide what to do about the cold, they hear a The British soldiers drive away as a crowd of local people turns
Japanese patrol approach. A person calls out asking for help in a corner and rushes toward the truck. The British point their
English. Maxi is convinced that the Japanese soldiers are empty rifles at the locals who surround the truck and then just
laying a trap. Maxi and Bernard sit together in the cold dark stop and stare at the soldiers. The locals begin to rock the
watching the trees as a voice calls for help in English. They truck. The men panic. The local police appear and fire into the
huddle together under Maxi's blanket until the voice fades crowd. The crowd disperses.
away. They stay up all night and hatch plans to open a rabbit
farm together after the war. Morning arrives. They carefully
search the plane and find what they needed. They cannot find Analysis
a trace of the pilot, only a trail of blood. The walk back takes a
long time. They become lost and hear foreign voices in the The narrative switches to the time Bernard spent away from
distance. Bernard urinates in his shorts and knows he is a Britain. This insight into his past also provides a new
coward. Eventually they realize that the foreign voices belong perspective on elements of his character which were only
to local men. They trade their blanket for a guide back to the supposed by other people. Queenie viewed Bernard as a
airfield where they are told that the war is over and Germany person who lacked sexual urges, who had few friendships with
has been defeated. other people, and who held racist views. Some of these
opinions are proven wrong while others are upheld. The view of
Chapter 37 Bernard as a person who lacks any sexual urges is one of the
quickest to be disproved. Bernard mentions that, in the
Bernard is relieved that the bombing attacks on London have
aftermath of an attack on the airfield during his early days in
ceased, but he is convinced that the British fighting in the East
the war, he was shocked to discover that he was sexually
will continue for years in India and Burma which today is also
aroused. The excitement of the attack is far removed from his
called Myanmar. He is shocked by the news that Japan has
dull life as a bank clerk. He believes that the near-death
surrendered, and the news of a "new-fangled bomb" intrigues
experience shows that someone wants to kill him. The fact that
him. Bernard's unit is ordered to move nearer to Burma, and
someone wants to kill Bernard fills him with a sense of
they liberate prisoner-of-war camps as they progress. The
importance that he lacked throughout his life. This sense of
emaciated condition of the British prisoners makes Bernard
self-worth combined with the energy and excitement suggests
proud to be from a country where soldiers are forbidden to do
that the shock of the war is like a sexual awakening for
so much as "raising a hand" to captured enemy troops.
Bernard. In the ensuing chapters, he spends more time thinking
Bernard and the other troops become resentful when they
about Queenie. He focuses on her body and her movements
hear news of other men returning home while they remain
sexually. His sexual thoughts about his wife are far removed
stationed out east. The men strike and refuse to work. Bernard
from the lackluster disinterest that defined his domestic sexual
disapproves, but the strike ends after a few hours. The strikers
situation. The war has awoken repressed sexual feelings in
claim success, but the unit is then sent to Calcutta in India.
Bernard even if Queenie does not yet know it.
Chapter 38
Bernard's relationship with Maxi is also a refreshing change for
In Calcutta Bernard and the other men are issued rifles without him. He lacks close friends in Britain and has become
ammunition and driven on the backs of trucks through the separated from those people he knew. Maxi is a younger man
streets of the smoldering ruins of the city. The streets are who instantly bonds with Bernard. He jokingly refers to
empty apart from the dead bodies of local people. Bernard has Bernard as an old man and even nicknames him "Pop" because
no idea what caused the riots but blames the city's various of his patriarchal role in the unit. This relationship is as close as
religious groups for turning on one another. The arm of a dead Bernard will come to being a father. He tried and failed to have
body gets caught in the wheel of the truck. An officer orders a a baby with Queenie so the relationship with Maxi becomes the
soldier to remove it, but the soldier refuses. The soldier is next best thing. Their dynamic is not quite one of father and
disciplined, and the removal of the severed arm falls to Maxi son, but Bernard takes pleasure in being the older, wiser figure
and Bernard. The act makes Bernard vomit. They free the who can pass along his wisdom even if he is not necessarily
that wise.
One part of Bernard that does not change is his racism. He Chapter 40
views the Indian people as lesser humans and treats them with
contempt. When the unit is caught in a riot on the streets of Bernard leaves the meeting and takes up his guard duty. He
Calcutta, they are surrounded by dead bodies. The unit watches over a hangar of freshly shipped supplies that they
escapes, and someone asks about the identity of the rioters would have killed for during the war. He believes that the locals
only to be told "who bloody cares." This sentiment reflects can steal "anything." The soldiers spend most of their time
Bernard's views on race as a whole. Anyone non-white and fighting local bandits. Tonight Bernard is on guard duty with
non-British is part of a teeming horde of untrustworthy lesser two local men named Arun and Ashok. Bernard expects a quiet
humans. Only the white British are capable of fighting with watch, but Ashok begins asking him questions about India,
honor, intelligence, and respect. He sees a Japanese prisoner Britain, and the potential strike. Bernard thinks he hears
of war being marched through the camp and is told that the something in the distance while Ashok excitedly chats about
man will be shot. Bernard thinks nothing of this and even views Britain. As Ashok chats about the British ensuring that they are
the execution as a benevolent act. Later his unit liberates never ruled by Germans, Bernard notices smoke and fire over
British prisoners of war being held by the Japanese and the camp. Arun and Ashok chat in their language while Bernard
remarks that the Japanese are monsters for the way they treat deliberates what to do. He is convinced that Arun and Ashok
the British men. He immediately forgets that he has seen are laughing at him. Two men appear and tell him that the
Japanese prisoners of war executed rather than held in prison. camp is on fire. Maxi is still inside so Bernard rushes toward
sensible and practical while reviling any other race for their
Chapter 41
comparatively better treatment of British prisoners. He
consistently elevates white British people above all others even The camp is on fire. Bernard tries to organize people into a
when he has been presented with evidence that contradicts his chain to fetch water in buckets. No one listens, and one man
views. War changes Bernard in many ways, but his views on punches him in the face. The buildings collapse as the fire
race are immovable. engine arrives. Bernard tries to help, but the firemen tell him to
leave. They drag him away as he begs them to save Maxi. A
soldier Bernard knows explains that the men were still in the
Chapters 39–41 meeting when the fire started. Maxi may not have got out in
time. Injured men stumble around in the chaos, and Bernard
notes that the locals are standing around doing nothing. They
Summary are chatting and laughing. Bernard attacks one man and
demands to know who started the fire. He has to be dragged
Chapter 39 away before he kills the man.
ceasing to exist. being dropped. Bernard refuses to give up his fellow soldiers
but learns that Maxi and seven others are dead. The officer
The fault lines in the British Empire are beginning to emerge. becomes enraged and declares that "discipline must be
India has been under British control for centuries, and Bernard maintained."
recalls the many benefits and advantages that the British have
given to India. He believes that education, railways, and sports Chapter 43
are worth the price of independence because he does not
believe the local Indian people can run the country themselves. Bernard knows that Maxi will be remembered as a hero and
The Indian people seem less inclined to this view. Arun and wishes that he had died alongside his friend in the fire. The
Ashok chat with Bernard, but Ashok takes a drily sarcastic punishment for Bernard is prison. He shares a cell for two
tone. He talks about the war and the way the British fought to weeks with four Indian men. Bernard is convinced the men are
ensure that they were not ruled by another country such as criminals and refuses to sleep in case they steal his paper and
Germany. The implied meaning of his words is that the Indian pen. He decides to lie to Queenie about events but does not
people should not be ruled by another country such as Britain. know what to say. The thought of his father in World War I
Bernard does not notice the implications of Ashok's words, but (1914–18) writing home to his mother does not inspire him. He
the cracks in the foundation of the British Empire are beginning remembers his father's struggles after the war. Arthur Bligh
to appear. The Empire as Bernard knows and loves it will soon had returned from the war a changed man and "a stranger" to
cease to be. his young son although he seems to like Queenie. The bombs
over London had brought back all of Arthur's trauma, and
The fire in the camp is a physical manifestation of the malaise Queenie had said one day that "it would be the best thing if he
that is spreading through the military. The men are annoyed did go." Bernard remembers this as it was the moment he
that they have not been sent back to Britain after the war. realized that "she could be heartless." He still wishes that he
They have been turned into a peacekeeping force, and rumors and Queenie had parted on better terms. The letter paper
of strikes and uprisings begin to spread through the camp. remains blank.
These rumors are as dangerous as the fire. They threaten to
burn down everything the British have built. Bernard had tried Chapter 44
and failed to organize a bucket chain and quell the fire This
Bernard is told that he may go home. He is one of the last of
represents how he is trying and failing to save the old empire
his unit to remain in India, and he reminisces about the people
from the dangers of the modern world. His efforts are
he has met during his time in the country. Bernard travels from
completely in vain. He cannot stop the collapse of the Empire
Calcutta to Bombay. Along the way he runs into the soldier
any more than he can save the entire camp with a bucket of
whose disobedience led to the meeting hosted by Maxi. The
water.
man mocks Bernard and recommends that Bernard visit a
brothel. He provides an address but is shocked when Bernard
blames him for Maxi's death. Bernard learns that the
Chapters 42–44 disobedience charges against the young soldier were quickly
dropped. Maxi and the other men died in vain. Bernard tries to
attack the soldier but fails miserably. People laugh at him. Later
Summary Bernard visits the brothel on the soldier's advice and hires a
prostitute. He has sex with the Indian woman but cannot look
Chapter 42 her in the eye. After he finishes he notices that she is "nothing
but a girl." He apologizes to her while she cowers from him. He
Bernard Bligh is threatened with punishment for abandoning
collapses into a weeping, howling mess. He throws money at
his guard post and losing his rifle. Arun and Ashok swear that
her and leaves.
they have no idea what has happened to the weapon. Bernard
tries to explain the circumstances of his desertion. He
mentions that he knew the men in the camp and had been with
them before leaving for his guard post. The officer in charge
offers to swap information about the meeting for the charges
Queenie takes Arthur's old bedroom while Bernard stays in Queenie is shocked to hear her husband's plan to start a rabbit
their old bed. Queenie locks the door once she is in her room. farm. The plan reveals how little Bernard understands his wife.
The next morning she finds Bernard talking to Cyril Todd. He She moved to London and married Bernard to escape life on a
moves things around the house and prepares her a breakfast farm. He arrives home after a long unexplained absence and
of toast to eat together. He immediately begins interrogating immediately announces that he plans to take her right back to
her about the lodgers and is disgusted that she has rented the the kind of life she has tried to escape. The idea of returning to
rooms to people who are not "respectable." He insists that they work on a farm after all these years is so patently absurd to
will have to leave and suggests that he and Queenie move out Queenie that she asks her husband to repeat himself. Not only
of London. He mentions starting a rabbit farm, and Queenie is does the concept of the rabbit farm baffle her, but the thought
confused. She feels as though she is being "smothered." of becoming a farm wife reveals to Queenie that her husband
does not understand her desires and motivations. He does not
comprehend why she married him or why she wanted to
Analysis escape life on a farm in the first place. Bernard does not care
about other people or empathize with their motivations. His
Bernard Bligh cannot help but be wrong about everything. One first instinct on returning home is to thrust his wife back into
of his errors is the self-diagnosis he makes on the journey back the role she has spent her entire life trying to escape.
to Britain. He catches a disease from the prostitute he visits in
India and notices a pus-filled wound appear on his genitals.
Without visiting a doctor, he diagnoses this as syphilis. The Chapters 48–50
next two years are spent hiding from Queenie in shame as he
knows that he will be unable to explain to his wife that he has
contracted a disease from a prostitute. Only when he catches
the flu is he told that he does not have syphilis. Bernard is
Summary
wrong once again, and this self-diagnosis has cost him two
Chapter 48
years of his life. His pride and arrogance have caused him to
stay away from the woman he supposedly loves. Bernard's In 1948 Bernard Bligh describes a dream in which he is in bed
errors are typically motivated by hate and racism, but the most with Queenie. They hear a plane, and he knows that it is
absurd of his mistakes can be blamed entirely on his pig- Japanese. He imagines the Japanese pilot crashing into the
headed stupidity. house. He cannot move for fear, but Queenie sits up and
greets the Japanese pilot "like she's talking to a neighbor."
When Bernard does arrive home, he is shocked to discover
Then Bernard wakes up.
that his house is being rented out to black people. Bernard
notices this but does not immediately ask for an explanation Chapter 49
from Queenie. His first instinct is to talk over the matter with
Cyril Todd who is the next-door neighbor. Todd is a noted The narrative switches to Gilbert Joseph's perspective. He
racist who complains that the presence of black people on the opens the door to Winston who is the Jamaican man and twin
street has prompted him to move. Todd is the man Bernard brother of Kenneth who also rents a room in Queenie's house.
relies on for information about the lodgers. He trusts Todd's The man launches into a fat tirade and explains that Bernard
judgment on such matters above that of his wife. Only after has told him to leave the house by tomorrow or the police will
consulting with Todd does he feel informed enough to tell be called. Gilbert is convinced this man is Kenneth, and he has
Queenie what he plans to do. Her input and opinion are been tricked by the twin brother. Eventually Kenneth relents
irrelevant on the matter. The emphasis Bernard places on and admits to his real identity. Kenneth is cross that he has to
Todd's opinion over Queenie's opinion reveals the lack of value pay tax at his job and tries to rope Gilbert into a plan to rob the
he places on his wife's judgment. He does not want Queenie's premises. Gilbert refuses. Kenneth explains that he got into an
thoughts on their future or the black lodgers, yet he is willing to altercation with Bernard and was told to leave. Kenneth
listen to the thoughts of Cyril Todd. Queenie's low opinion of refused, knocked Bernard to the floor, and then suggested that
her neighbor contrasts with Bernard's high opinion of Todd and "his wife seem to like the company of black men." Kenneth
shows how incompatible they are as husband and wife. wants Gilbert to help him beat Bernard up, but Gilbert insists
on talking to Queenie. Kenneth leaves, and Hortense and hardens this point of view and illustrates the absurdity of
Gilbert eat. She is not afraid of being kicked out of "this run- Gilbert's deluded belief that he can talk himself out of the
down place." situation.
Gilbert's self-delusion is subtler. He deludes himself into happened. Instead she breaks into tears, and Gilbert cannot
thinking that his wit and his charm will get him out of any bring himself to point out that he was right. They sit on a bench
situation. Kenneth masquerades as Winston and explains to together, and people stare at them. He comforts Hortense and
him that Bernard has decided to kick the Jamaicans out of the manages for the first time to make her smile and laugh. Gilbert
house. Kenneth wants to enlist Gilbert's help in fighting back takes Hortense on a double-decker bus around London to
against this aggression. Gilbert refuses and insists that he will cheer her up. In Trafalgar Square pigeons land on Hortense's
talk to Queenie. Gilbert recognizes that attacking Bernard will head. She marvels at Buckingham Palace and notices people
not help his situation but mistakenly believes that he has the staring at her. Gilbert points out that the king in the palace has
charm needed to convince Queenie to cure her husband's the same problem. They have tea and cake in a café and talk
racism. Bernard is an unrepentant racist, and no amount of about life in London. Gilbert suggests that she take a job while
second-hand arguments from his wife will convince him studying for her teaching qualifications in Europe. He realizes
otherwise. The altercation between Bernard and Kenneth only that he has convinced himself that he will study law one day,
important than the black people who enter the room just as he of the baby. Gilbert begins to understand and offers to fetch a
considers British people more intelligent than the Indian doctor. Bernard has "true pain" in his eyes. He slams Gilbert
people. His actions might seem illegal or absurd to Gilbert or against a wall while Gilbert protests his innocence. They
Hortense, but Bernard is operating entirely within his own exchange blows, and Bernard is sent staggering backward.
mindset. He can see no reason why a white British man should Gilbert knocks Bernard to the floor and declares that the baby
not be able to do as he pleases at the expense of anyone else. has "nothing to do with me." Bernard replies that it has
everything to do with "you and your kind." Gilbert pities Bernard
The birth of Queenie's baby boy is Bernard's worst nightmare who glares at him with "unmistakable hate." Gilbert abandons
made real. Not only does Bernard consider black people to be him and climbs the stairs to his room. His suit is ruined, and he
naturally inferior to him, but he is insecure about himself. The is soaked in blood. Hortense exits the room and announces
idea that his wife has had an affair with a person he considers that she is leaving. She tells Gilbert that he disgusts her. He
so naturally beneath him attacks his self-importance. Bernard tries to chase after her but treads on a nail. He hops around in
considers Queenie to be an intelligent, competent, and pain as he tries to explain that he has only been in England for
sensible woman. The idea that she might have an affair with a seven months. Hortense leaves, and he hobbles after her
black man does not compute in his mind. The baby arrives at a through the streets and realizes that he is still covered in
moment when Bernard is demonstrating his racist views. He blood. He spots Hortense as she tries not to look lost, and he
flings all manner of insults and slurs at Gilbert while trying to realizes that she does not have a plan. A car stops beside her,
kick the lodgers out of the house. He is shocked when Queenie and the driver makes Hortense a proposition. She is horrified
does not immediately take his side in the argument because and jumps into Gilbert's arms. He slams the roof of the car and
his idea of Queenie is that of a person who naturally agrees tells the driver that "this woman is not your whore."
with his views. Not only does she disagree, but she almost
immediately gives birth to a black baby. During the birth Chapter 55
Bernard is locked out of the room. The exclusion of Bernard is
a physical representation of his emotional state. He is locked The narrative switches to Queenie who believes that Bernard
out of the room in a physical sense, but he is also locked out of is owed an explanation. She remembers how lonely she had
a true understanding of Queenie. For his entire marriage, he been after Arthur's death as she had begun to believe that
has been standing on the other side of the door trying to Bernard would never return. A knock on the door one day
understand his wife. Bernard and Queenie have never had a revealed Michael Roberts. They became reacquainted, and
true understanding, and the moment of birth becomes a Michael explained how he had crashed in a plane during the
realization of the distance between them. Bernard is forced to war then went into hiding until peace broke out. Queenie
endure his worst nightmare. His wife gives birth to a black baby returned Michael's wallet, and he explained that he had lost his
while he is locked inside a room in his home. He has no control, whole family in a hurricane. They stayed together for three
no understanding, and no support. days before Michael left for Canada. Queenie knew that she
was pregnant, and she hid the changes in her body. She
explains all of this to Bernard who listens silently. Once she is
Chapter 56
Summary The narrative switches back to Gilbert. Winston visits him with
a business proposition. He wants to buy a house in North
Chapter 54 London and hopes that Gilbert will run and maintain the
building. Winston cannot pay Gilbert, but Gilbert and Hortense
In 1948 Gilbert Joseph reflects on the aftermath of the birth. will pay very little rent and work when they can. Gilbert accepts
He sees Hortense covered in blood and hears her tell Bernard and takes a detour while working to check on the house. He
Bligh that he can see his wife now. Hortense walks haughtily thinks the house is "a palace" compared to his old home
up to the bedroom, and Gilbert worries that Queenie has although it does need fixing up. He worries what Hortense will
insulted his wife. He visits Queenie and notices the skin color say. She is keen to leave Queenie's house and the confusing
situation. Her willingness to move into the rundown home and knew and hated thereby justifying her actions to some degree.
eagerness to help fix it up surprise Gilbert. That night Hortense
invites Gilbert to share the bed, and they lie down together. Michael's baby has the power to bring together the household
She kisses him and strokes his leg while asking about the new just as it begins to break apart. Michael and Hortense grew up
He wants to sell the house and move to the suburbs. Queenie virulent racist throughout the novel so his wife giving birth to a
worries that Gilbert and Hortense no longer trust or like her. mixed-race baby may have made him angry. Instead Bernard
She invites them to sit with her for a quick cup of tea, but finds himself emotionally numb. He wanders through the house
Bernard's presence makes the situation awkward. Queenie like a ghost and is unable to process the reality of the situation.
asks him to fetch the tea, and he is so shocked that he leaves He then interacts with the baby and finds himself caring for
the room. Queenie tries to make conversation with Gilbert and and coddling the small boy. He surprises himself and Queenie
Hortense. Queenie then shows them the baby and reveals that with his almost loving treatment of a child he knows cannot be
his name is Michael. The name makes Hortense flinch. Gilbert his own. The anger she expects to see in Bernard is replaced
explains that she has a brother named Michael who was killed by a quiet gentleness. The baby represents all of Bernard's
in the war. Queenie watches Hortense and Gilbert with the worst nightmares because a person of a race that he
baby and realizes that they look "so right with him." She goes considers inferior has impregnated his wife and destroyed his
to the kitchen and runs into Bernard who is bringing the tea. marriage. Yet he cannot bring himself to hate the baby and
The four adults sit and drink tea. Queenie suddenly asks finds that the baby brings out honesty in him that he might
Hortense whether she and Gilbert "will take" the baby and raise never have found. Bernard explains the reality of his time in
him as their son. She begs the Jamaican couple, but they are India and the shame of his past by disguising his words in a
too shocked to agree. Bernard is equally astonished and insists baby voice. The contrast between his racist views and his
that the baby has a home. Queenie argues that there is no way treatment of the mixed-race child highlights the unexpected
she and Bernard can raise the baby. She begs again for the nature of his sudden honesty and suggests that Bernard might
sake of her "darling little baby's life." one day be able to come to terms with the way his racist views
negatively impact other people.
Chapter 59
Queenie tries to give her baby away to Gilbert Joseph and
The narrative switches to Hortense who admits that she "never Hortense. The proposed adoption causes a scene. Bernard's
dreamed England would be like this." Gilbert lifts a tear- temporary tenderness fades, and his contempt for non-white
streaked Queenie from her knees and asks her how she could people returns. Gilbert appeals to Bernard's better nature and
offer to give up her baby. He places a comforting arm around provides a lengthy explanation of how racism is hollow and
her shoulders, and Bernard demands that he remove his "filthy harmful. Gilbert provides Bernard with an opportunity to
black hands." The two men square off again as Queenie flees redeem himself and turn away from the racism which has
the room. Hortense is left holding the crying baby. The men defined so much of his past. Gilbert's words are so eloquent
argue and Gilbert appeals to Bernard to abandon his racism. that they completely change Hortense's perception of her
The strength of the words makes Hortense see her husband in husband and make her think that he might be capable of great
a new light, as a "man of class, a man of character." Bernard accomplishments. At this moment Gilbert becomes the well-
claims he cannot understand Gilbert's words. Gilbert takes the spoken lawyer he has always dreamed of becoming as he puts
baby from Hortense, hands it to Bernard, and guides his wife his case to the court of public opinion. Gilbert presents
out of the room. He runs upstairs, sits on a step, and says Bernard with this opportunity to make everybody's lives better.
"damn them." They agree to take the child and raise it just as The moment is an opportunity for Bernard to also find some
Hortense was raised by her aunt and uncle. Gilbert and kind of redemption. Bernard turns the moment into a racist
Hortense pack up their remaining possessions and take the insult. He begins to apologize before completing his sentence
baby to their new home. Hortense discovers a bundle of cash and insisting that he has not understood a word Gilbert has
and a photograph of Queenie inside the baby's nappy. She said. Bernard rejects the opportunity at redemption. He proves
decides to keep both a secret as the van pulls away with himself to be an irredeemable racist and confirms that he
Gilbert, Hortense, and the baby inside. cannot raise a mixed-race baby no matter how much he
seemingly cares for the child. Bernard will always feel the child
is different and will grow to resent him. The dismissal of
Analysis Gilbert's eloquent appeal justifies Queenie's plea that the black
couple should adopt her baby and condemns Bernard to a life
Bernard Bligh's first interactions with the baby prompt an
of misery. He will never get what he wants whether he wants a
unexpected reaction. Bernard has revealed himself to be a
Queenie's parting gift to her son is a large sum of money and a — Hortense, Chapter 3
photograph of herself. Hortense accepts these gifts but keeps
them hidden. She is the product of an illegitimate relationship
The aftermath of the hurricane reveals the physical and
herself, and she sympathizes with the child who will grow up
emotional toll that it has taken on the island and the
not knowing his true parents. Her experiences being raised by
characters. Hortense has seen the closeness of Stella Ryder
her aunt and uncle inform her decision to keep Queenie's gifts
and Michael Roberts and has begun to suspect that the man
hidden. They will be put away for the child's future, and
she loves is having an affair with the white American woman.
Hortense's past as an adopted child means that Queenie can
The underside of the tree becomes a symbol of Hortense's
trust her to do the right thing. Neither the money nor the
emotional distress. The raw, tangled roots that have been
photograph ensures that the child will have a happy life, but the
ripped from the ground symbolize Hortense's emotional pain.
intelligent and empathetic way in which Hortense reacts to
The underside of the tree and the relationship between Stella
uncovering the gift reveals that she is mature and
and Michael have been revealed by the hurricane, and
knowledgeable enough to raise the child with love and care.
Hortense is horrified that she has had to witness either.
The gift provides material support for the baby's future while
Hortense's reaction assures that the baby will also receive the
right emotional support.
"We have a deal."
— Queenie, Chapter 9
"No living person should ever see Queenie and Cyril Todd think of Hortense and Gilbert Joseph
very differently. Queenie sees the Jamaican couple as lodgers against him. Gilbert often finds himself wishing that he was
in her house as well as something of a novelty. She laughs and anywhere else. He wants to be in Britain while in America. He
makes jokes with them, and she thinks a few inwardly wants to be in Jamaica while in Britain, and he dreams of
prejudiced thoughts, but she fundamentally views black people returning to Britain now that he is back in Jamaica. This sense
as people. Todd does not offer any non-white non-Briton that of restlessness matches his ambitions and makes the imagery
same privilege. He does not want to meet, know, or familiarize of the island feel like a prison. The trappings that might seem
himself with Hortense and Gilbert. They are aberrations to be like paradise to many people become reminders of his
removed from the neighborhood. Todd complains over and limitations. The palm trees that appear beautiful to tourists only
over about their presence, but he is ignored. He is not alone in reiterate that Gilbert is trapped on the island with no future.
his sentiments, and other neighbors begin to sell their houses Gilbert's restlessness and ambition turn him against his
due to the changing racial demographics of the neighborhood. homeland and make him dream of a different place to live.
Todd's views represent the dominant mode of thought for
most working-class Londoners. The immigrants are not "only
lodgers." In his opinion they are a herald of a wretched future. "Later it was the peck from the
chicken's beak."
"Everyone fighting a war hates."
— Queenie, Chapter 25
England longer than his wife and has come to terms with the can be applied to any situation in which he finds himself. The
reality of life in England. He teaches her an important lesson quote reveals the self-importance at the heart of Bernard's
that "not everything the English do is good" in the hope that character.
she can destroy her preconceptions about England. Once
Hortense unlearns what she knows about England, she can
begin to learn about the benefits of living in the country. "Nothing for it, I just threw the
money at the wretched whore,
"I, as a visitor to this country, then left."
should step off the pavement into
— Bernard Bligh, Chapter 44
the road."
Bernard Bligh visits a brothel and hires a prostitute only to be
— Hortense, Chapter 33
overcome by shame and regret. The interaction with the young
girl reveals many of his worst traits. His racist attitudes turn her
Hortense learns that her race is more important in England into an object that he abuses for his sexual gratification. His
than her manners. She has been raised to value politeness and sense of self-importance values his emotional reaction to his
good manners above all else. She believes in the correct violent tendencies above his own. His domestic sexual
etiquette that she was taught at school and judges anyone frustrations spill over into an aggressive intimate moment with
who does not measure up to her high standards. The a girl he only later realizes is barely a teenager. His love of the
conversation with Queenie teaches her that her black skin British empire is reflected in his belief that he can simply throw
means that her manners are rendered moot. She is expected money at the girl and leave without addressing any of the pain
to clear the sidewalk for an English man because she is or damage he has caused. The visit to the brothel exposes
considered "a visitor to this country" even though this goes Bernard's numerous character flaws and prejudices and brings
against everything Hortense was taught. Hortense might judge them to a terrifying, bitter climax. With nowhere left to turn,
people by their manners, but people in England judge her by Bernard now believes that there is "nothing for it," and he has
the color of her skin. reached his lowest point.
grows up with an awareness that race is a nuanced and someone like Gilbert or Michael Roberts might be better than
important part of his identity but believes that it is only a part of him in any way. Bernard is offered the chance to change or
a larger whole. His social class, his personality, and his actions evolve his racist views. The climax of the story involves an
have a greater say in how he is viewed by society. impassioned plea from Gilbert for Bernard to abandon his
racism. Gilbert is eloquent, energized, and impressive. His
Hortense's experience with racism is slightly different but speech is enough for Hortense to think that the foolish man
helps to illustrate the nuances of racial identity which exist in she married might one day be capable of great deeds. Bernard
Jamaica but not in Britain. Hortense is the illegitimate product ignores Gilbert. He is unrepentant in his racism, and he refuses
of an affair between a local government official and a poor to change. He continues to wield his racism like a weapon and
woman. Both of her parents are black, but Hortense's mother uses it to punish people he does not like. Ultimately Bernard is
is dark-skinned while her father is light-skinned. Hortense is punished. His demonstration of racism leads to Gilbert and
born with a skin tone similar to her father, and her light-skinned Hortense adopting Queenie's baby. Bernard is left behind with
racial identity is constructed for her from a young age. Her a wife who hates him and the lingering embarrassment and
mother and her family recognize that her light skin means that shame of his failure as a person.
she might have a better chance at success in society so they
send her away to live with her father's relatives. Before
Hortense can even speak, her racial identity is created for her.
Society assumes that she will benefit because her skin is Manners and Etiquette
lighter than that of her poor mother. In a predominantly black
society like Jamaica, the nuances of racial identity operate
differently to race in England. Hortense would be considered
Manners and etiquette dictate how a person should operate in
black in England, but Jamaican society allows for nuance
society. This theme is treated differently by different
within the scope of black identity.
characters. Some believe in manners while others do not.
Queenie and Bernard are also central characters in the novel. Hortense is the best embodiment of this theme. She treats
Queenie prides herself on her lack of racist views. She is manners and etiquette as a demonstration of character. She
friends with black people and assures them that she is happy believes in good manners and politeness above all else, but this
to be seen with them in public. Her patronizing tone reminds view is undermined by her actions. Hortense may act as though
Gilbert and Hortense that she still views them as different and she values manners and politeness, but she does not hesitate
other in some fashion. Queenie is aware of the racial to betray her friends and undermine social institutions in the
difference between herself and black people and tries her best pursuit of her selfish ambitions. Hortense makes a business
to rise above racism although she does not always succeed. proposal to Gilbert Joseph who is her friend's boyfriend. She
Her efforts are well-meaning but occasionally misplaced and offers to pay for his boat fare to England on the condition that
awkward. Queenie represents a well-intentioned effort to he marry her. She will then follow him to England in a short
overcome racism but reveals the extent to which greater time because she does not want to make the journey as an
understanding and empathy are needed because Queenie unmarried woman. Hortense has betrayed Celia, stolen her
rarely seeks advice from black people and rarely allows them dreams and her boyfriend, and then agreed to marry a man she
to lead her actions. Her efforts to beat racism contrast with her does not love to move halfway around the world. Hortense is
husband's unrepentant prejudice. not polite in these moments. She uses etiquette as an excuse
to marry Gilbert and demonstrates that the social institution of
Bernard hates anyone who is not wealthy, white, and British. marriage means nothing to her. Hortense is manipulative,
The chapters that focus on Bernard show that he hates black ambitious, and unafraid of justifying her actions using the
people, poor people, Indian people, and many others. He manners and etiquette she learned in school.
believes himself naturally superior to people of other races
even though he has achieved nothing in his life which might This dependence on etiquette is a shield for Hortense. She
justify this position. He is a dull and unambitious man who is grew up in an unloving household after being abandoned by
trapped in a loveless and sexless marriage to a woman who her mother, her father, and her cousin Michael Roberts. She
does not like him. Yet Bernard cannot entertain the idea that has lost everyone she loves, and all she has left is manners.
She uses social politeness and the rules she learned in school share regret for events in their past. Their inner shame and
to keep everyone at a distance. Hortense does not allow her regrets guide them through life as they search for a route to
husband Gilbert to touch or kiss her because she believes this redemption or forgiveness. Queenie has an affair and becomes
is inappropriate. Manners and etiquette are coping devices pregnant. Bernard is imprisoned and disappears for years.
Hortense uses to manipulate the world around her. She hopes Gilbert enters into a sham marriage, and Hortense betrays her
to move to England in search of success. She sees England as best friend Celia Langley. These past mistakes threaten the
a place that can match her ambition and her devotion to characters' futures. They must be resolved before the
politeness and manners even if she will not or cannot admit to characters can hope to find happiness. Not every character
herself the reality of her relationship with etiquette. finds redemption or achieves forgiveness, but the shared need
for redemption and forgiveness makes them important themes
Hortense is a deluded person. She acts selfishly and blames in the novel.
her behavior on manners and etiquette. Her delusions extend
further than this when she travels to England. She expects that The birth of Queenie's baby is the moment when all of the
she will be immediately welcomed because she has learned characters must confront their pasts. The baby represents
and practiced all of the arcane rules of polite society. She many of the most pressing regrets. Queenie knows that the
believes that her eloquence and her manners will make her a baby represents the one moment of passion in her life but
success. Hortense arrives in England and is forced to confront acknowledges that there is no way she can raise an illegitimate
her delusion. People cannot understand her accent, they mixed-race child in a racist society. Bernard sees the baby as
patronize her, they treat her impolitely, and no one adheres to proof of his failures as a man and a husband, and his growing
the strict system of etiquette in which she has entirely invested affection for the baby cannot mask the extreme racism he has
herself. Hortense discovers that her manners or her politeness exhibited throughout the book. Gilbert is asked to adopt the
are not important to others. Instead she is viewed entirely baby but knows that this would further complicate the sham of
through the lens of skin color. People see her race above all a marriage between him and his wife. Even though their
else and treat her accordingly. Even a proclaimed non-racist relationship has been improving, he is torn between selfishly
such as Queenie constantly points to Hortense's race as the ignoring the problem and accepting the baby. Hortense
most important part of her character. Hortense's worst perhaps has the most empathy for the child. She was an
moment occurs when she visits the education authority. She illegitimate baby given up by her mother for the chance at a
has her letters of recommendation which are physical better life. The adoption of the baby presents Hortense with
representations of Hortense's understanding of manners and the opportunity to provide a caring, loving home that she never
etiquette. The letters mean nothing, and Hortense is laughed experienced. Many of Hortense's flaws can be traced back to
out of the building. She drops the letters in the street, and she her cold, distant upbringing. The adoption of the baby is a
struggles to pick them up. This moment becomes a chance for her to achieve redemption for her past sins by
manifestation of Hortense's confrontation between delusion correcting the defining sin in her own life.
and reality. The physical representations of her politeness and
manners are scattered in the street like her broken ideas of Gilbert and Hortense accept the offer, and they leave the
English society. Hortense must pick up her ideas from the house with the baby. Redemption and forgiveness are not
ground and recreate herself more realistically. Her delusions assured for either of them, but the willingness to provide a
are torn apart and scattered through the street, and Hortense loving home for a poor child means that their actions go some
needs to rebuild herself and her future while grasping for the way to address their past mistakes. The growing bond
idea of what she once was. between Hortense and Gilbert suggests that their marriage
might not be so much of a sham after all, and the baby
becomes a physical representation of the growing bond
between the husband and wife as well as a shared investment
Redemption and Forgiveness in the success of the marriage. Both Hortense and Gilbert now
have more than just their self-interest riding on the marriage so
they have more of a reason to make their marriage work. They
forgive each other for the sins and transgressions they have
The characters in Small Island are very different, but they all
committed, and the baby allows them to forgive themselves.