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Saturday 9 February 2019

The Immaturity of Professor Higgins in Pygmalion :: George Bernard Shaw Pygmalion Essays

The immaturity of prof Higgins in Pygmalion           Professor Higgins is seen throughout Pygmalion as a genuinely rude man. While wiz may expect a advantageously educated man, such as Higgins, to be a gentleman, he is distant from it.  Higgins believes that how you cherished someone is not important, as long as you apportion everyone equally.           The great secret, Eliza, is not having bad manners or wide-cut manners or any other particular sort of manners, but having the resembling manner for all human souls in short, behaving as if you were in Heaven, where in that respect are no third- class carriages, and one soul is as good as another. -Higgins, Act V Pygmalion.   Higgins presents this theory to Eliza, in hope of justifying his word of her.  This theory would be fine IF Higgins himself lived by it.  Henry Higgins, however, lives by a variety of variations of this philoso phy.           It is easily seen how Higgins follows this theory.   He is consistently rude towards Eliza, Mrs. Pearce, and his mother.  His manner is the like to each of them, in accordance to his philosophy.  However the Higgins we see at the parties and in good times with Pickering is well mannered.   This apparent discrepancy between Higgins actions and his word, may not exist, depending on the interpretation of this theory.         There are two workable translations of Higgins philosophy.  It can be viewed as overlaying everyone the very(prenominal) all of the time or treating everyone equally at a particular time.           It is obvious that Higgins does not treat everyone equally all of the time, as witnessed by his actions when he is in one of his states (as Mrs. Higgins parlor maid calls it).   The Higgins that we see in Mrs. Higgins parlor is not the same Higgins we see at the parties.  When in the state Henry Higgins wanders aimlessly slightly the parlor, irrationally moving from chair to chair, highly unlike the calm Professor Higgins we see at the ball.  Higgins does not believe that a person should realize the same manner towards everyone all of the time, but that a person should treat everyone equally at a given time (or in a certain situation).  When he is in one of those states his manner is the

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