Character Analysis
by Margaret Loftus Ranald
SMITHERS, Henry.
The Cockney trader, "a tall, stoop-shouldered man of
about forty," bald, with a long neck and a large Adam's apple.
His dress is that commonly associated with colonial oppressors.
His pasty-yellow face and rum-reddened nose are set off by his
dirty white drill riding suit, puttees, spurs, and pith helmet.
He wears a cartridge belt and an automatic revolver around his
waist. He carries a riding whip. His eyes are pale blue,
red-rimmed and ferretty. He is unscrupulous, mean, "cowardly and
dangerous." He took in Brutus Jones when the latter landed on
the island, hiring him despite his gaol record, or perhaps
because of it since Jones accuses Smithers of having once been
in prison, an accusation he vehemently denies. Basically he is
an expository device in the play, serving to introduce
information and at the end delivers the epitaph on Jones, for
whom he has some curious respect. Smithers sees Jones as a more
advanced person than the natives of the island, represented by
Lem.
JONES, Brutus. He is the
main character. "A tall, powerfully built negro of middle age.
His features are typically negroid, yet there is . . . an
underlying strength of will, a hardy, self-reliant confidence in
himself that inspires respect." He has an air of intelligence,
yet at the same time he is "shrewd, suspicious, evasive." He
wears a somewhat garish uniform of a pale blue coat, "sprayed
with buttons" and covered with gold braid, and red trousers,
with a light blue stripe at the side; he sports patent leather
boots with spurs, and carries a pearl-handled revolver in his
belt. Nonetheless, he still projects an air of dignity rather
than the merely ridiculous.
Brutus Jones had arrived on this unnamed
island two years ago as a stowaway, fleeing from the
consequences of having killed a prison guard with a shovel
during road work while serving time for killing a fellow Pullman
porter, Jeff, in a gambling dispute. Helped along by Henry
Smithers, Jones moves "from stowaway to Emperor in two years."
At the beginning of the play he is supremely self-confident,
making sure that Smithers realizes who is in charge and
suggesting that the white man has himself been in prison, an
allegation the cockney trader denies. Smithers offers a shock to
this confidence by revealing that Lem, a native chief who had
previously tried to have Jones killed, is plotting a revolution
in the hills. Jones, however, has nothing but contempt for his
subjects, whom he calls "low-flung bush niggers," and he has
played on their superstition by claiming that he can be killed
only by a silver bullet. He has even had one made
and tells his simple subjects that he will kill himself
when the time comes, " `cause I'm de on'y man in de world big
enuff to git me. No use deir tryin.' " Jones, however,
underestimates the cunning of Lem, who melts down coins and
makes some silver bullets, one of which finally kills Jones.
This is only the skeleton of Jones's character which is
gradually revealed throughout the course of this expressionistic
monodrama.
After hearing Smithers's warning, Jones hears
a tom-tom in the distant hills beating at seventy-two per
minute, the "normal pulse beat," a drumming that will continue
with accelerating beat and increasing volume without
interruption throughout the play. He then decides it is time to
put his plan of escape into effect, and to Smithers's rather
"puzzled admiration," he leaves by the front door as the Emperor
Jones, conscious of his own intellectual superiority and sure of
his ability to outwit the forest. However, he is wrong, and the
next six scenes of the eight-scene play demonstrate the decline
of Brutus Jones from self-sufficient ruler who had easily put
away his Baptist religion and laid "Jesus on de shelf" into a
panic-stricken, almost naked creature calling, "Lawd Jesus, heah
my prayer!" In the course of those scenes, Jones is driven
almost mad by the obsessive and incessant drumming which has
pursued him through reenactment of his own crimes and the
history of the black race in the United States. First, Jones
confronts the ghost of Jeff, the Pullman porter he had murdered
with a razor, and fires his first bullet at him. Next, in
another part of the forest, he reenacts the killing of the
prison guard and disperses this image with another shot. His own
personal history then goes back into the collective unconscious
of the black race following the theories of C. G. Jung, in which
O'Neill was then interested, and Jones is placed on the auction
block and bid for by a planter. In terror and rage, Jones
asserts his rights as "a free nigger" and shoots both the
auctioneer and the planter. His clothing reduced now to little
more than a breech cloth, and maddened by the drumming, Jones,
with only a single silver bullet left, reenacts the horrifying
experience of the slave ship.
Finally, he finds himself on the banks of the
Congo, almost naked, before a low stone altar. Feeling that he
has been in this sacred place before, he kneels fearfully before
it, and the Congo Witch-Doctor comes to dance out a supplication
to a malevolent deity who requires sacrifice. Jones, now
hypnotized by the drumming and the dancing, sways with the
Witch-Doctor, who indicates that Jones is to be the sacrifice to
the dark god who comes up from the water in the form of a huge
crocodile. Jones writhes toward the crocodile, which slowly
advances toward him, as Jones calls not upon the gods of the
Witch-Doctor, but upon that Baptist God, whom he had put aside
in Scene i, yet repeatedly invoked against the forces of the
supernatural. Finally, as he calls on Jesus, he remembers his
revolver and the silver bullet. With that last shot the
crocodile disappears, a deity of darkness vanquished by a silver
bullet. In the next scene Jones himself is killed, also by a
silver bullet, this one cast by Lem and his allies.
It is exceedingly easy to see this play as
one which shows that Jones's thin veneer of civilized
intelligence is quickly stripped away to reveal the true nature
of the man, a creature of superstition and instinct
rather than reason. Yet it is also a parable of a different
nature, because Jones as a character has shown also the
falseness of modern civilization. From the "white quality" he
met on the Pullmans, then a high-status unionized job for
blacks, he has learned how to survive in modern society, by
crime and by exploiting others lower than himself. He has
adopted the "new" God of Christianity, whom he will quickly put
aside when He becomes inconvenient. However, Jones is not a
complete member of modern society, as the garish furnishings of
his throne room and the faintly ridiculous nature of his uniform
indicate. In the play he is taken back to his very roots, and
the Witch-Doctor leads him toward a submission to the dark gods
of his racial unconscious. But unlike Yank in The Hairy Ape,
Jones does not choose to "belong" in this environment and calls
upon his new God for aid. But the crocodile god will nonetheless
be revenged; the forces of darkness will not be denied. Hence it
is fitting that Jones also dies by a silver bullet.
Notable performances of this exceedingly
difficult role were by Charles Gilpin, the creator of the role,
and later by Paul Robeson in the 1924 New York revival and in
London in 1925. Robeson also performed the role in a film
adaptation.
LEM, A native chief, a
heavy-set, ape-faced old savage of the extreme African type,
dressed only in a loin cloth." He leads the opposition to Brutus
Jones, even deputing someone to kill the emperor. As a result of
a misfire, Jones kills his would-be assassin and proclaims that
he could only he harmed by a silver bullet. Lem, whom O'Neill
does not consider intelligent, believes this piece of
superstition and manages to manufacture silver bullets of his
own by melting down coins. It is with one of these that Jones is
killed. As emperor, Jones had contempt for the "low flung bush
niggers," yet they manage to kill him. |