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“The fact is I don’t know what’ll become of us. Here it is in the middle of August and the coldest day of the year. It’s simply freezing; the dogs are sticking to the sidewalks; can anybody explain that? No.”
In her opening monologue, Sabina gives exposition about the state of the world and the threat over humanity. Her expression of dubiousness as to the family’s survival is ironic: On one level, the play is metatheatrical, and Sabina is therefore played by an actor (played by a real actor) who knows how the play ends. As a character, Sabina also knows that the play is cyclical, and the audience knows that humanity survived an ice age. Her use of dogs sticking to sidewalks as a measure of temperature is ridiculous, a gesture toward the play’s absurdity.
“We’ve rattled along, hot and cold, for some time now—[…] and my advice to you is not to inquire into why or whither, but just enjoy your ice cream while it’s on your plate,—that’s my philosophy. Don’t forget that a few years ago we came through the depression by the skin of our teeth!”
Sabina’s reassurance to the audience is a nod to the real crisis that the United States survived only a few years before and an implicit recognition of the crisis that they’re enduring with World War II. Of course, her philosophy about enjoying whatever pleasures one can without thinking about them too deeply is characteristic of the mentality that allows Sabina to simply let the fire go out and nearly kill them all. However, at the end of the play, she demonstrates that the capacity to enjoy oneself and a night at the movies is just as essential to humanity as George and Maggie’s relentless work ethic.
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By Thornton Wilder
Allegories of Modern Life
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