Mr.
Tench, a disgruntled English dentist living alone in a small
Mexican town in the 1930s, heads for the quayside. He is expecting
the delivery of an ether cylinder, which he needs for his dental
practice. At the river bank, he watches as the ship, the General
Obregon unloads 140 cases of beer. A small, shabby man carrying
an attaché case strikes up a conversation with him, and
Mr. Tench invites him back to his home. He assumes the man will
be departing on the boat when it sails, but it will not leave
for several hours.
Mr. Tench
shows the man around his modest home, including his dental surgery.
Then they sit in rocking chairs and drink the brandy that the
stranger carries around with him. Mr. Tench reveals that he
is a separated man with two sons, one of whom is dead. He is
disillusioned about life. The stranger comments that the town
was a happier place before the Red Shirts (soldiers) came. Mr.
Tench says he would like to return to England, but he cannot
afford to do so. The stranger then makes inquiries about how
long the boat trip to Vera Cruz will last.
They are
interrupted by a child knocking at the door. He wants a doctor
for his sick mother. Mr. Tench inquires of the stranger, thinking
that he is a doctor, but the man says he could do no good. However,
he decides to go with the child, knowing that by doing so he
will miss the boat. The child leads the way; the stranger rides
a mule. He leaves a book behind, and Mr. Tench discovers it
is written in Latin. Not knowing what the book is about, he
hides it inside a small oven. Then he returns to the quayside,
where the General Obregon has just set sail. But he finds no
ether cylinders there. Meanwhile, the stranger journeys on the
mule. He had tried to escape on the boat that he has now missed,
but now he prays that he may be caught.
Analysis
In the opening chapter, Greene creates a sense of mystery and
foreboding, and a gloomy, claustrophobic atmosphere that continues
throughout the novel. The reader gets the feeling that something
dangerous has been and still is going on in the town. Greene
does not say explicitly what it is, though. We learn that a
man named Lopez has been killed, for helping “undesirables”
to escape. We also learn that this seems to be a not unusual
occurrence. Also, a church has been sacked, which is why Mr.
Tench is able to have a stained glass window in his dental surgery
depicting the Madonna. A group known as the Red Shirts appears
to have had a hand in this vandalism.
Although
the first chapter is told through his eyes, Mr. Tench a minor
figure in the story. Greene begins with him because Mr. Tench’s
boredom, depression and loneliness, the feeling that he is trapped
in the town and cannot escape, sets the tone of much of the
novel.
It is the
stranger, who is in fact a priest on the run in a society that
is persecuting the Catholic Church, who is the protagonist (central
character) of the novel. A hint about the stranger’s character
is that he carries a flask of brandy with him. The significance
of this will be apparent later.
The experience
of the stranger in this first chapter is typical of what he
will go through during the novel: he will be near to escape
several times, but then something will drag him back.
Greene does
not waste space in explaining the nature of the persecution
the Church is enduring, but one small incident reveals a great
deal. That occurs when Mr. Tench finds the book that the stranger
has left behind. It has a lurid cover, but inside, the text
is printed in Latin. It is obviously a devotional text of some
kind, which the priest (or whoever made the book) has felt the
need to disguise by a fake cover. The book is really a symbol
of how tenaciously people cling to their faith even when it
is dangerous to do so. It cannot simply be abolished because
politicians decree that it should be.
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