The Workhouse Ward: Analysis of Major Characters
"The Workhouse Ward: Analysis of Major Characters" explores the intricate dynamics of its main characters—Michael Miskell, Mike McInerney, and Honor Donohue—within the confines of a workhouse setting. Michael Miskell is portrayed as an old, contentious pauper, fixated on defending his past and asserting his superiority over his old neighbor, Mike. Their relationship is characterized by a continual verbal sparring, with Michael seeking to both elevate his own status and undermine Mike, despite his vulnerability when faced with solitude. On the other hand, Mike McInerney, an old farmer who has also fallen into pauperism, engages in this back-and-forth with equal fervor. Though he has moments of triumph, his victory does not eliminate the underlying tension nor the need for the verbal exchanges that bring him a sense of purpose.
Honor Donohue, Mike's sister, adds another layer to this complex interaction. She embodies practicality and resilience, navigating her desire for companionship while managing the frequent conflicts between the two men. Her decision to leave the quarrelsome environment indicates a rejection of the stagnant nature of their disputes, as she prioritizes her own needs for a fulfilling life. The interplay among these characters highlights themes of rivalry, the human need for connection, and the struggle for dignity within a challenging environment, ultimately depicting a microcosm of human relationships marked by conflict and necessity.
The Workhouse Ward: Analysis of Major Characters
Authors: Douglas Hyde and Lady Augusta Gregory
First published: 1909
Genre: Play
Locale: A ward in Cloon Workhouse, Ireland
Plot: Comedy
Time: The 1900's
Michael Miskell, a pauper and current resident of the Cloon Workhouse. Michael is an old and disputatious peasant who spends his time talking to his former neighbor, Mike McInerney, who is now his fellow workhouse inmate. Michael seems determined to have the last word, to suffer the most, and to come from the greatest family. In short, he is in a continual battle to defend his position against his old neighbor and fellow pauper. He is cunning and has the verbal skills to question the value of another's possessions or family while inflating his own situation. He rehashes old grudges and charges such as being bitten by Mike's dogs after returning from a fair day. Apparently that incident happened many years earlier, but Michael claims that it caused his downfall because he has been “wasting from then till now.” Although their lives have been so closely tied together, his dearest wish is to be buried at a distance from his old neighbor. Although he dismisses all troubles and obstacles with words, however, he is vulnerable to not having an opponent with whom to contend. When Mike McInerney indicates that he is to leave with his sister, Michael poignantly asks if Mike is going “to leavemewithrudepeopleandwithtownspeople…andthey having no respect for me or no wish for me at all.” He needs someone to talk to because his life is talk, and, “with no conversable person,” he is miserable.
Mike McInerney, an old farmer who has lost his land and been reduced to pauper status in the Workhouse. He spends his time defending himself against the assaults of Michael Miskell and making countercharges against his adversary. He does seem to have been better off in earlier years than Michael, but his strategies of attack and defense are quite similar to those of his opponent. He claims, for example, that the banshee cries for the famous family of the McInerneys but never for the low Miskells. Their equal battle is turned in his favor by the arrival of his sister, Honor Donohue, with the invitation to join her in her seaside home. His victory does not lead to a final cry of triumph, however, and he softens his attitude to his old adversary by first offering him his pipe and then taking the unusual step of asking his sister to take Michael into the household. When she refuses, he is content to remain where he is; for all of its difficulties, a workhouse of continual verbal battles is preferable to a more regular but boring life without talk and the constant excitement of verbal battle. At the end of the play, they return to the battle that has been going on for so many years as Mike defends against Michael's attacks the house he has just rejected. Their battle finally exhausts words, and they resort to a final barrage of pillows, mugs, and whatever is within reach. Their relationship is a marriage of enemies that only death can dissolve.
Honor Donohue, an elderly woman, Mike's sister. She masks her need for a man in her home with a newfound charity to her impoverished brother. Although she is eager to have her brother help out in the house, she is not an obliging fool. When she is faced with the prospect of having two quarreling old men with her day and night, she proves as resilient as they are stuck in their ways. She immediately leaves them and goes off by herself with the clothes she had offered to Mike, to seek “a man for my own.” She is not interested in living through words and roles; the practical business of living comes first in the life of which she takes charge.