III. Answer the following questions:
1. Why was Julia doubtful about her beauty and sex appeal the night
after her adventure with Charles? It happened because Charles did not desire
her.
2. How did she put her looks to the test? Why did she need it?
That afternoon, when she had had her sleep, she got up, made up a
little more than usual, and without calling Evie put on a dress that was
neither plain nor obviously expensive and a red straw hat with a wide brim. She
needed it to find out whether she had sex appeal or not.
3. Describe Julia's feelings when she had caught a young man's eye in
the street? Rely on the lines starting with, "Suddenly her heart gave an
exultant leap..." (Ch.25) and use your stylistic and linguistic knowledge
while commenting.
Suddenly her heart gave an exultant leap. She had caught a young man's
eye and she was sure that there was a gleam in it. He passed, and she had all
she could do not to turn round. She started, for in a moment he passed her
again, he had retraced his steps, and this time he gave her a stare. She shot
him a glance and then modestly lowered her eyes. He fell back and she was
conscious that he was following her. It was all right. She stopped to look into
a shop window and he stopped too. She knew how to behave now. She pretended to
be absorbed in the goods that were displayed, but just before she moved on gave
him a quick flash of her faintly smiling eyes.
4. Did the date meet Julia's expectations? What were the man's real
intentions towards having a cup of tea with Julia? Julia did not expect that the
man only wanted to take an autograph for his wife that’s why the date did not
meet her expectations.
5. The young man didn't seem to be very polite and well-bred. Prove it
using the text and comment on the techniques the author employs to create a
desirable effect upon the reader.
There was a sort of impudence in his manner that Julia did not much
like, but then, as she sensibly reflected, you could hardly expect the modesty
of the violet in a young man who picked you up in the Edgware Road. (Before we
go any further let's 'ave this autograph, eh? Do it now, that's my motto. Let
me bring my young lady to see you in your dressing-room one day. Just shake
'ands with her, see? It would mean a rare lot to her. Why, she'd go on talking
about it the rest of her life.)
6. After the stroll, what thoughts occurred to Julia when she got back
home and started reflecting over herself? Rely on the lines starting with,
"When she got home she went upstairs to her room..." (Ch.25) and use
your stylistic and linguistic knowledge while commenting.
Having come, the woman began speaking to herself, asking rhetorical
questions, what shows her emotionality and acting skills as if she was on stage
at that moment: Old, old, old. There are no two ways about it; I'm entirely
devoid of sex appeal. You wouldn't believe it, would you? You'd say it was
preposterous. What other explanation is there? I walk from one end of the
Edgware Road to the other and God knows I'd dressed the part perfectly, and not
a man pays the smallest attention to me except a bloody little shop-assistant
who wants my autograph for his young lady. It's absurd. It's ridiculous to
suppose that I could have got to my position if I hadn't got sex appeal. What
do people come to see an actress for? Because they want to go to bed with her.
Do you mean to tell me that I could fill a theatre for three months with a
rotten play if I hadn't got sex appeal? What is sex appeal anyway?
8. What was the name of the play Michael was putting on?
Nowadays
9. How did Julia feel before the rehearsals?
The first rehearsal still made her almost sick with excitement. It was
the beginning of a new adventure. She did not feel like a leading lady then,
she felt as gay and eager as if she were a girl playing her first small part.
But at the same time she had a delicious sense of her own powers. Once more she
had the chance to exercise them.
10. The play Michael was staging was a modern version of The Second
Mrs. Tanqueray by Arthur Pinero (1855-1934), an English playwright. What
changes did Michael introduce to the original?
Some of the old characters were introduced, and Aubrey Tanqueray, now
a very old man, appeared in the second act. He was now a retired
brigadier-general who played golf and deplored the decline of the British
Empire.
12. What motifs did Julia have to praise the mediocre Avice Crichton
and keep her in the cast?
She knew her well enough to be sure that if she were dismissed she
would tell Tom that it was because Julia was jealous of her. He loved her and
would believe anything she said. He might even think that Julia had put this
affront on her in revenge for his desertion. No, no, she must stay. She must
play the part, and fail; and Tom must see with his own eyes what a bad actress
she was. They both of them thought the play would make her. Fools. It would
kill her.
13. What pains did Julia take to make herself look nice to meet Roger?
How does that characterize her as an actress and a mother?
She wanted Roger to be proud of her, and certainly she looked very
young and pretty in her summer frock as she strolled up and down the platform. You
would have thought, but wrongly, that she was perfectly unconscious of the
attention she attracted. Roger, after a month in the sun, was very brown, but he
was still rather spotty and he seemed thinner than when he had left London at
the New Year. She hugged him with exuberant affection.
14. What did Michael ask Julia to discuss with Roger?
Now that he was going to Cambridge so soon he ought to make up his
mind what he wanted to do. Michael was afraid that he would drift through his
time there and then go into a broker's office or even on the stage. Thinking
that Julia had more tact than he, and more influence with the boy, he had urged
her to put before him the advantages of the Foreign Office and the brilliant
possibilities of the Bar.
15. How did Julia react on Roger's reflection about his future?
What did they eventually talk about?
She had a feeling of acute
discomfort.
16. During their conversation, Julia notices some new traits in her
son's character and behavior. What are they?
He seemed a trifle apathetic; he had none of her sparkling vitality.
He listened with his slow, quiet smile; but she had an uneasy feeling that he
did not think it quite so funny as she did. She sighed in her heart. Poor lamb,
he could have no sense of humour.
17. Roger sounds reproachful to Julia. What doesn't he approve of? Do
you agree with him?
He does not approve of her affair with Tom. I agree with him, for Tom
was much younger than she and wanted only her money and position.
18. What were Julia's arguments to support her point of view
about acting? Do you feel they are ground and serious? Why?
She said: “If an actress felt the emotions she represented she'd tear
herself to pieces”.
19. How did their talk end?
Their talk ended with conversation about Tom and Julia. The scene
was intolerable. But later they heard a car drive up. That was Michael.
20. What was the thing Roger said that bothered Julia most?
Julia had a sickening fear that Roger knew that Tom had been her
lover. It was impossible, it was only her guilty conscience that made her think
so; at Taplow there had been nothing; it was incredible that any of the horrid
gossip had reached his ears; and yet there was something in his expression that
made her certain that he knew. She was ashamed..
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