Perhaps influenced by late winter longings, I was attracted
to the lurid cover of a paperback magazine while browsing at
" Twice Told Tales " in Pawtuxet Village : " Tales of the South
Pacific " by James A. Michener .
After reading " An Officer and a Gentleman " , I reflected
on one of the ironies of our " democracy " : there are no
laws against social snobbery - a quiet evil that ruins millions
of lives.
Michener's non- hero character, Ensign Bill Harbison,
is unhappy with the navy because his star is not rising fast
enough - while a brother in law has just made captain in
the Army . Not much to do on that South Pacific paradise but
try to stay in shape with the sports there. At night he
dreaded a pile of letters - always stupid and naive - which
was his duty to censor. " Bill never saw any human dignity in
the letters he read ".
Bill is attracted to a pretty nurse , Nellie
Forbush - " from a small hick town in Arkansas " , and
from a social class way beneath gentleman Bill.
One day Nellie looked so beautiful on the beach
that Bill just had to have her : " He ripped her dress and
brassiere ".
" Bill ! Stop ! " insisted Nellie .
" He paid no attention to her entreaties but kept clawing
at her underwear ".
In desperation Nellie hit him on the head with a
coconut.
A little later in the story Nellie realizes - of
course ! - that she loves Bill - but will he marry her ?
Is there a chance - " when the war is over ? "
Officer and Gentleman Bill Harbison was flabbergasted
by the nerve of " a common little girl from some hick
town " . Never in a hundred years would he have noticed
Nellie Forbush in the states.
We will assume that Nellie ( recall her name from
the popular musical " South Pacific " ) had to wash
THAT MAN right out of her hair .
More than a half a century after World War II,
democracy is thriving in America and the gap between the
social classes is greater than ever.
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Ron