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Guests of the Nation - Wikipedia

"Guests of the Nation" is a short story written by Irish author Frank O'Connor which was published in 1931. It depicts the summary execution of two British Army hostages by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) during the Irish War of Independence. The story is split into four sections, with each section being written using a different stylistic tone; it begins by depicting the friendship between the British hostages and their IRA captors, until they are suddenly ordered to summarily execute the hostages in retaliation for the execution of four IRA prisoners. Neil McKenzie's stage adaptation of the story received an Obie Award in 1958.

"Guests of the Nation"
Short story by Frank O'Connor
First UK edition of collection
CountryIreland
LanguageEnglish
Publication
PublisherMacmillan
Publication date1931

Plot

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The story begins with two British Army privates, Hawkins and Belcher, being held hostage by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) near Ballinasloe, County Galway during the Irish War of Independence. The hostages play cards and argue about politics, religion and girls with their IRA captors, Bonaparte and Noble, while being housed in the cottage of an old lady who collaborates with the IRA. She tends to the hostages but are quickly to scold both them and their captors if they displease her. Bonaparte and Noble become friends with Hawkins and Belcher, but their superior Jeremiah Donovan, the commanding officer of the local IRA flying column, remains aloof from everyone else in the cottage.

On one evening, Donovan reminds Bonaparte and Noble that Hawkins and Belcher are hostages and not prisoners, and if the British authorities execute any IRA prisoners, then the two Englishmen will be summarily executed in retaliation. This disturbs Bonaparte and he struggles to face Hawkins and Belcher on the next day. A few days later, Feeney, an IRA intelligence officer, arrives at the cottage and informs Donovan that four IRA prisoners have been executed, and Hawkins and Belcher are to be shot in retaliation. Donovan passes this on to Bonaparte and Noble, who are deeply saddened. In order to get the two hostages out of the cottage, Donovan lies to them and says that they are merely being transferred; on the way down a path into a nearby peat bog, he tells them the truth. At first, Private Hawkins does not believe him. But as the truth settles in, Hawkins begs Donovan not to kill him, arguing that, if their positions were reversed, he would never shoot "a pal". He also requests his captors to allow him to desert and join the IRA in order to be spared death, but they refuse to answer him.

Bonaparte, racked with misgivings about executing Hawkins and Belcher, secretly hopes that they attempt to escape and plans to let them go if they try and do so. He realises that he now regards them as human beings, rather than as part of a faceless enemy. Despite Hawkins’ pleadings, Donovan shoots him in the back of his head. As Belcher fumbles to tie a blindfold around his own eyes before he is executed, he notices that Hawkins is still alive and tells Bonaparte to "give him another." Donovan then shoots Belcher in the head, and the captors digs a shallow grave in the bog and bury the two hostages in them. Feeney leaves and the captors return to the cottage, where the old woman asks what they have done with the hostages. They do not answer her, but she immediately understands and falls sobbing to her knees to pray for both men's souls. Noble does the same, while Bonaparte leaves the cottage and looks up at the night sky feeling small and lost. He says that he never felt the same way about the war ever again.

Characters

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  • Bonaparte
  • Noble
  • Jeremiah Donovan
  • Hawkins
  • Belcher
  • The Old Woman

• Guests Of The Nation is an ironic/sarcastic description of British Army hostages seized in the Irish war of Independence by Irish republicans.

Belcher: A large Englishman who is one of the hostages, he was the quieter of the two who ingratiated himself with the old woman of the house by helping her with her daily chores. Belcher had made her his friend for life. Belcher on realising his fate seemed to accept it as “whatever unforeseen thing he’d always been waiting for had come at last”. His sense of organisation sees him preparing his own blindfold for his execution. His courage and generosity sees him request of his executioners that they finish off Hawkins first before he meets his own fate. This is further demonstrated in Belcher's acknowledging to his executioners that they are only doing their duty. Belcher's whole character and personality is found in his last statement. His lover “went away with another fellow and took the kid with her. I like the feeling of a home, as you may have noticed, but I couldn't start another again after that”.

Hawkins: The second hostage made his captors look like fools when he showed that he knew the country better than they did. Hawkins knew Mary Brigid O’Connell and had learned to dance traditional dances such as the Walls of Limerick. Hawkins had too much old talk and as a result lost at cards. He always argued with Noble into the early hours. He worried Noble about religion with a string of questions that would "puzzle a cardinal". He had a deplorable tone and he could throw bad language into any conversation. A communist and agnostic, Hawkins always argued with Noble about capitalism and religion. When it came to his execution Hawkins could not believe his fate and thought his friends were joking. Hawkins's terror at the prospect of death highlights the futility of the conflict in terms of humanity and the friendships that developed between the captors and hostages. The execution of Hawkins provides a chilling climax to this episode.

Jeremiah Donovan: He is not the narrator. Irish soldier who does not like the prisoners. Donovan reddens when spoken to and tends to look down at his feet, yet when it comes time to execute the Englishmen, he is strangely energised and excited. Donovan believes in a questionable interpretation of duty to his country, of which he constantly speaks and which he cites as justification for the execution. When he hears news of the four IRA prisoners being executed, it becomes clear that he unidimensionally believes in taking an eye for an eye. Donovan is the character who commences the act of killing in the execution scene, though it is the narrator's firearm that is first mentioned by the narrator.

Noble: A young volunteer who along with Bonaparte guarded the hostages. Noble’s character and personality is expressed in the story in his exchanges with Hawkins. Noble is a devout Catholic who had a brother (a priest) and worries greatly about the force and vigour of Hawkins' terrible arguments. Noble shows his humanity in not wanting to be part of a deception, telling the hostages that they were being shifted again. Yet he understood his duty, and undertook the order of preparing the graves at the far end of the bog.

Bonaparte: The narrator of this story. It’s not clear from the story the relationship between Bonaparte and the author, but given O’Connor’s role in the I.R.A some comparisons may well be drawn. Bonaparte has the responsibility of telling a terrible and chilling story about a war of independence. These stories are a testament to the butchery and futility of war. The last paragraph of the story best describes the effect this episode had on both Bonaparte and Noble. Communicating on what happened in the bog to the old lady without saying what they did, the description by Noble of the little patch of bog with the Englishmen stiffening into it, and Bonaparte “very lost and lonely like a child, a stray in the snow. And anything that happened to me afterwards, I never felt the same about again."

"Guests of the Nation" is the title story of the 1931 Frank O'Connor short story collection of the same name.[1] This collection includes:

  • "Guests of the Nation"
  • "Attack"
  • "Jumbo's Wife"
  • "Nightpiece with Figures"
  • "September Dawn"
  • "Machinegun Corps in Action"
  • "Laughter"
  • "Jo"
  • "Alec"
  • "Soiree Chez une Belle Jeune Fille"
  • "The Patriarch"
  • "After Fourteen Years"
  • "The Late Henry Conran"
  • "The Sisters"
  • "The Procession of Life"

Influences

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Isaac Babel's Red Cavalry influenced O'Connor especially in this story "Guests of the Nation".[2]

Adaptations

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"Guests of the Nation" was made into a silent film in 1934, screenplay by Mary Manning, directed by Denis Johnston, and including Barry Fitzgerald and Cyril Cusack. Guests of the Nation at IMDb  

The story was adapted for the stage by Neil McKenzie.[3] It received a 1958 Obie Award for best one-act play.[4]

The Crying Game, directed by Neil Jordan, is partly based on O'Connor's short story.

References

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  1. ^ Frank O’Connor. Guests of the Nation. London/New York: Macmillan, 1931.
  2. ^ Kratkaya Literaturnaya Entsiklopedyia 5. Moscow: Sovetskaya Inceklopedia. 1968.
  3. ^ "Guests of the Nation". Dramatists Play Service. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  4. ^ "Search the Obies". Village Voice. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
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