Later
that evening, Mitch comes round. He is unshaven and in his work
clothes. Blanche has been drinking, but hides the bottle in
a closet. She greets Mitch in a forgiving manner, but he ignores
it. He too has been drinking. Blanche fetches a bottle of liquor,
pretending that she has just discovered it. Mitch says he wants
none of Stanley’s liquor, and adds that Stanley told him
she had been lapping it up like a wild cat all summer. Blanche
won’t even respond to the accusation. Mitch then says
he wants to see her in the light. He has never seen her in the
light before (because Blanche does not want him to see how old
she is). Over her protests, he switches the light on. She covers
her face, and he switches the light off again. He says he doesn’t
mind that she is older than he thought, but he does mind that
she pretended to have such old-fashioned ideals. He has heard
the stories about her not only from Stanley but from others
too. Blanche admits that after her husband’s suicide,
she was so distraught and lonely she did have intimate relations
with strangers. She admits also to the affair with the seventeen-year-old
at the school. Mitch accuses her of lying to him, but she denies
it, saying she never lied in her heart.
A blind Mexican woman
comes around the corner selling flowers for the dead. Blanche
opens the door and says she does not want any flowers. But the
woman has reminded her of death and the tragedies of Belle Reve.
She goes back inside and is lost for a few moments in disturbing
thoughts from the past. She also recalls her Saturday nights
in Laurel with the drunken soldiers. Mitch places his hands
on her waist, and tries to embrace her. Blanche says that if
he wants her, he should marry her. But he says he no longer
wishes to marry her. Her last hope crushed, she tells him to
go away, but he remains there staring at her. She rushes to
the window and calls out “Fire!” Mitch leaves quickly
as Blanche falls to her knees.
Analysis
The musical symbolism continues with the polka tune, which shows
what is going on in Blanche’s mind. As the stage directions
state, a “sense of disaster [is] closing in on her.”
The tune stops when Mitch arrives, symbolizing her brief revival
of hope, but she cannot keep it out of her head for long. The
moment when Mitch tears the paper lantern off the light bulb
is also a symbolic moment. It represents the final unveiling
and destruction of the illusions about herself that Blanche
has been trying to maintain.
The entry of the
blind Mexican woman selling flowers for the dead,
Blanche’s reflective comments on death, and the recurrence
of the polka music all work together to emphasize yet again
the theme of death that runs through the play. The opposite
of death, as Blanche herself points out, is desire. Desire is
what makes Stanley and Stella such a vibrant couple together,
and it is desire that lies at the heart of Blanche’s promiscuity
after the death of her husband. It was just her desperate attempt
to keep the spark of life alive. |