Plot Synopsis (continued)
With
only his sleeping bag and one piece of luggage, Sean leaves Michaeleen
as he wanders off to the pub during a wild, breezy windstorm,
muttering: "Well, it's a fine soft night, so I think I'll
go and join me comrades and talk a little treason." Sean
arrives at his newly-purchased thatched cottage - the fierce
weather (and especially the wind) is a barometer of the intense,
natural emotions that will soon sweep over Sean and Mary Kate,
the shepherd girl from the green dell. To his surprise, smoke
curls up from the chimney.
Inside, in front of the hearth where a fire burns,
a broom and a neat, swept-up pile of leaves and other debris suggest
someone has been cleaning. Mary Kate is flushed out from hiding in
the bedroom when Sean hurls a rock through one of the windows. She
rushes for the front door, but he reaches for her right arm, pulls
her back, twirls her like a ballet dancer into the cottage, twists
her arm behind her back as she resists, and then bends the stranger
over backwards with an embrace and passionate kiss. The storm continues
to blow through the cottage, sending Mary Kate's red hair whipping
around behind her - the wind is an external manifestation of her
passion.
When she realizes what has happened, she stands back,
reflects about his bold advances, and then cocks her fist back for
an explosive, powerful swing at his face. He flinches, bends backward,
and blocks the stiff-armed blow with his hand as she misses. [Maureen
O'Hara fractured her wrist in the filming of this scene.] In the
sensual love scene, Sean tells the fiery red-head of his passionate,
uninhibited interest after he first saw her in the meadow, and then
in the spiritual setting of the church. Although she explains that
she was cleaning the cottage out of Christian duty, her gesture conveys
her own personal interest:
Mary Kate: It's a bold one you are. And who gave
you leave to be kissin' me?
Sean: So you can talk!
Mary Kate: Yes I can. I will, and I do. And it's more than talk
you'll be gettin' if you step a step closer to me.
Sean: Don't worry. You've got a wallop!
Mary Kate: You'll get over it, I'm thinkin'.
Sean: Well, some things a man doesn't get over so easy.
Mary Kate: (slowly delivered) Like what supposin'?
Sean: Like the sight of a girl comin' through the fields with
the sun on her hair. Kneeling in church with a face like a saint.
Mary Kate: Saint indeed!
Sean: And now comin' to a man's house to clean it for him.
Mary Kate: But that was just my way of bein' a good Christian
act.
Sean: I know it was, Mary Kate Danaher. And it was nice of you.
Mary Kate: Not at all.
At the end of the poetic, romantic scene, Mary Kate
gazes at him for a few seconds, opens the door to leave (unleashing
the wind again), turns toward him, boldly and daringly plants a kiss
on his lips, and flees into the wild night. The wind buffets her
and pushes her around as she crosses a stream and stumbles on the
grass toward the road.
Before long, Sean has fixed up his thatched-roofed
cottage with new emerald-green paint. His neighbors, Reverend Cyril
Playfair (Arthur Shields) and his wife Elizabeth (Eileen Crowe) compliment
(and gently chide him) for his romanticized handiwork:
Elizabeth: Well, Mr. Thornton, you are a wonder.
It looks the way all Irish cottages should and so seldom do.
And only an American would have thought of emerald green.
Cyril: Red is more durable.
Elizabeth: And the roses! How nice. You'll need lots and lots
of horse manure. Fertilizer, I mean. Horse is the best.
The Protestant Reverend Playfair appears to know Sean's
past life: "Thornton. It has a familiar ring to it. Ring to
it. Thornton." Sean downplays the association about his mysterious
past as a retired boxer: "Common name."
A horse-drawn cart delivers a "fine, big bed" from town -
the biggest one Sean could find for his huge size.
Matchmaker Michaeleen has been commissioned to set
up a strict and formal courtship between Sean Thornton ("bachelor
and party of the first part") and Mary Kate Danaher ("spinster
and party to the second part"). In her home where she offers
libations to the marriage broker, she is excited to learn of the
matchmaking effort, although she knows that permission must be granted
by her brother and "that won't be easy." (Without her brother
Will's permission to marry, Mary Kate cannot provide a dowry.) In
her parlor, Sean has "complete indifference" to Mary Kate's "proper
fortune" - he would be happy with her if she would "come
in the clothes on your back or without them for that matter."
She jumps to her feet, approaches the camera with a pleased, expressionistic
smile, and then gives her official, more proper reaction as she strides
back with her arms on her hips. The "well-propertied woman" flamboyantly
wags her finger at the slightly-inebriated Michaeleen, drags him into
her parlor, sits at a spinnet, and plays an Irish tune. After she recites
how much property she has (all extensions of her identity and personality),
he gleefully admits:
"I wouldn't mind marrying you myself." She then accepts Sean's
proposal if it includes her furniture and her independent savings
- she will not marry without her dowry:
Well, a fine opinion he must have of me if he
thinks I'd go to any man without a proper fortune. And this
you may tell your Mr. party of the first part. That when I
wed, whatever's my own goes with me...And all this furniture's
mine. And I have got china, and linen, and fifty pounds in
gold my father left me and my mother's rings and brooches,
and my grandmother's wedding veil and her silver combs and
buckles. And thirty pounds odd in notes and silver I've earned
this past fifteen years. That's all...And I'd have you tell
him that I'm no pauper to be goin' to him in my shift....Well
you can tell him from me that, that I go for it.
Formally-dressed Sean (carrying a small bouquet of
red roses) and Michaeleen call on Red Will Danaher to formally ask
his permission for Mary Kate's hand in courtship, but he rejects
the offer: "Get out! Why if he was the last man on the face
of this earth, and my sister the last woman, I'd still say no."
Sean's boxing past in the ring is reflected in his counter-challenge:
Red Danaher: Hey Yank! I'll count three. And
if you're not out of the house by then, I'll loose the dogs
on ya.
Sean: If you say three, mister, you'll never hear the man count
ten.
Mary Kate is heartbroken by her brother's firm refusal
to allow Sean to court her. Sean is extremely reluctant to understand
and accept local customs and the barriers that he faces:
Mary Kate: I thank you anyway, Sean Thornton,
for the asking.
Sean: You don't think this changes anything? It's what you say
that counts, not him.
Michaeleen: Now Sean, you've gone too far. That's enough.
Sean: Say, what is this? We're gonna get married. Aren't we?
(She turns away, dejected, and runs upstairs to her room.) (To
Michaeleen) (confused) I don't get it.
Michaeleen: This is Ireland, Sean, not America. Without a brother's
consent, she couldn't and wouldn't. I'm sorry for both of ya.
The rejected suitor leaves the house bewildered and
frustrated by the stable but rigid traditions that govern life in
Ireland - he tosses aside his bouquet of roses into the road. From
the rain-spattered, second-floor window that she is framed by, tears
flow down Mary Kate's cheeks as she gives up hope and is forced to
abide by tradition - the heavens cry for her as well.
Another voice-over narration by Father Lonergan describes
a bitter and depressed Sean who rides recklessly over the countryside
on a black horse [a symbol of his opposition to matrimonial traditions]:
Aw, those were the bad days, Sean with the face
as dark as the black hunter he rode, a fine, ill-tempered pair
they were. It was only a matter of time before one or the other
broke his neck. We knew things couldn't go on this way.
Sean's angry, suicidal rides help to spur a conspiracy
among the village's religious figures (both Protestant and Catholic)
to get Danaher to change his mind and bring matrimonial order to
his own life:
So we formed a little conspiracy. The Reverend
Mr. and Mrs. Playfair, Michaeleen Oge, and - saints forgive
us - myself. And on the day of the Innisfree Races, we sprung
the trap on Red Will Danaher.
At the Innisfree Races along the beach, local ladies
are told to place their bonnets on the finishing line (for the Innisfree
Cup) as the gentlemen riders assemble at the starting line ("Ladies,
your bonnets please!"). Mary Kate refuses to provide her bonnet
- but the wind blows it off her head anyway (expressing her subconscious
wish to give it as a courtly token). Danaher suspects that matchmaker/bookmaker
Michaeleen is "matchmaking" between Thornton and the Widow
Tillane. Danaher is deceptively misled to believe that the reason
why the Widow Tillane steadfastly rejects his romantic/marital interest
is because she doesn't want to live in the same house with the continuing
presence of his strong-willed, red-headed sister [Mary Kate keeps
house for him]: "What woman would come into the house with another
woman in it?" His own wedding to the widow would be assured
(and his own fear of maturity and domesticity would be conquered)
if he would allow Thornton to court and wed his sister first:
Danaher: What sort of a scoundrel is this Yank?
One minute, he's at me sister, and the next it's herself.
Michaeleen: Well, blame no one but yourself. If you had saved
me as your matchmaker, you and the widow would have been married
long since...Mind you, I'm not saying it's too late yet...Why
do you suppose the Widow Tillane has stood you off so long, huh?...You're
a rich propertied man!...What woman would come into the house
with another woman in it? If you got rid of Mary Kate, the widow
would have been in like a shot.
Danaher: No!
Michaeleen: Yes. You had your chance and you flubbed it. You
refused Seanin Thornton and he reneged on ya. Now I doubt if
he'd take your sister if you put a thousand pounds on her....Oh,
a lot of talk...Two women in the house and one of them a redhead.
Danaher commands his stubborn sister to "put up" her
bonnet on a stake at the finishing line. After noticing that the
Widow Tillane puts her hat there, Mary Kate follows suit. The exciting
race along the beach ends with Sean Thornton the victor as he snatches
the Widow Tillane's bonnet from a stake. To Mary Kate's dismay, the
only bonnet left unclaimed is hers. As Reverend Playfair congratulates
Sean, he is reminded further of Thornton's boxing name, but he vows
to keep it a secret: "You rode like a Trooper. Trooper. 'Trooper
Thorn', of course. I knew I'd seen you somewhere before." Danaher
is made jealous when he notices Sean is presented with both the winner's
cup and a kiss from the Widow. Reluctantly convinced of the matchmaker's
wisdom, Danaher permits Mary Kate and Sean to be courted - for a
dowry of 350 pounds.
In a communal gathering outside Red Will Danaher's
house - according to local customs, Danaher consents to formal courtship "under
the usual conditions"
with chaperone Michaeleen's supervision and watchful eye. The pair
are to be driven through the countryside on a 'date' by the matchmaker
while sitting in an open cart and facing in opposite directions. As
they depart, Mary Kate tosses her bouquet of flowers in the direction
of Widow Tillane.
Disconcerted, uncomfortable and bored with the traditional
customs, Yankee Sean resents the forced, slow-paced, awkward courtship
(with a chaperone present) as they ride with their backs toward each
other:
Sean: (to Michaeleen) I don't get this. Why do
we have to have you along? Back in the States, I'd drive up,
honk the horn, the gal'd come runnin'...
Mary Kate: (retorting) Come a-runnin'? I'm no woman to be honked
at and come a-runnin'.
Michaeleen: America. Ha! Pro-hi-bition! (pointing to an old castle)
You see that over there. That's the ancestral home of ancient
Flynns'. (joking) It was taken from us by...by...by the Druids.
(He stops the cart.) Quietest couple I ever heard. We'll get
nowhere at this rate. Off with ya....She's a fine healthy girl. No
patty fingers if you please.
The couple are allowed to walk a short distance in
front of the cart. Michaeleen advises that they remain cordial to
each other: "Is this a courting or a donnybrook? Have the good
manners not to hit the man until he's your husband..." The feisty,
spirited redhead admits to her fiery temper:
Mary Kate: I have a fearful temper. You might
as well know about it now instead of finding out about it later.
We Danahers are a fighting people.
Sean: I can think of a lot of things I'd rather do to one of
the Danahers - Miss Danaher.
Mary Kate: (She hushes him.) Shhh, Mr. Thornton. What will Mr.
Flynn be thinking?
To escape from their formal, vigilant chaperone and
the rigid rules of courtship, they impulsively steal a tandem bicycle
and quickly ride off through the town. Flynn's horse ends the pursuit
after them by stopping, from habit, in front of Cohan's Pub. Michaeleen
remarks: "I think you have more sense than I have me-self." After
riding awhile, the couple stop and look out across the landscape.
Near an ancient castle, Sean begins to chase Mary Kate and then averts
his eyes as she removes her shoes and hosiery to wade across a stream.
He playfully charges after her through the water without such propriety,
but then discards his formal derby hat and gloves by tossing them
over a rock wall.
As they enter an ancient church graveyard surrounded
by Gaelic/Celtic symbols, the sky is filled with dark thunderclouds
as their romantic freedom in Innisfree breaks more of the customary
traditions. Sean still believes he is dreaming about her. She explains
how long they will have to wait for kisses:
Sean: If anybody had told me six months ago that
today I'd be in a graveyard in Innisfree with a girl like you
that I'm just about to kiss, I'd have told 'em...
Mary Kate: Oh, but the kiss is a long way off yet.
Sean: Huh?
Mary Kate: Well, we just started a-courtin', and next month,
we, we start the walkin'-out, and the month after that there'll
be the threshin' parties, and the month after that...
Sean: Nope.
Mary Kate: Well, maybe we won't have to wait that month.
Sean: Yep.
Mary Kate: Or for the threshin' parties.
Sean: Nope.
Mary Kate: Or for the walkin'-out together.
Sean: No.
Mary Kate: And so much the worse for you, Sean Thornton. For
I feel the same way about it myself.
The last part of the romantic scene, now non-verbal,
is one of John Ford's most famous, sensual, and celebrated. As they
start to kiss each other, foregoing a traditional, long-term courtship,
a violent, fierce wind thrusts a giant green branch in front of them.
Lightning strikes and loud thunderclaps are heard as nature unleashes
its passionate forces in reaction to their brazen defiance of custom,
religion, and superstition. In the place of death, they are chastened
for blissfully kissing each other.
When the storm scares Mary Kate, they seek refuge from
the wind and drenching rain under an archway. Sean removes his coat
and protectively covers Mary Kate's shoulders with it. His white
shirt becomes more and more clinging and transparent as raindrops
dampen it and turn it flesh-colored. The rain soaks him to the skin
as they stand in each other's arms. As they embrace and cling to
each other, she holds her hosiery in her left hand against his drenched
chest. Her upturned face meets his lips for a kiss, and then she
rests her right cheek against him. Both look off toward the awesome
storm - and their future together, as the soundtrack plays the plaintiff
Irish ballad, "The Lake Isle of Innisfree." She initiates
a second, more subdued kiss, and then they stare off with solemn
expressions in different directions. The scene fades to black.
Their courtship is a short one. The next fade-in presents
the couple frozen once more - but this time in a traditional wedding
portrait pose at their marriage ceremony, as Father Lonergan narrates
(in voice-over): "And so they were married, in the same little
chapel I gave them their Baptism. Later, there was a nice quiet little
celebration." At the wedding reception, the photographer's flash
powder explodes at the left side of the frame. A group at the spinnet
piano plays and sings: "The Humor is On Me Now" - but they
abruptly quit when Father Lonergan appears. He surprises them by
sitting down at the piano to play and sing the same tune - with even
lustier lyrics.
Drinks for toasts are passed around the room - Mrs.
Rev. Playfair whispers:
"To a successful conspiracy." Formal toasts are not allowed,
however, until Will Danaher displays the dowry: "the bride's fortune." Michaeleen
positions everyone in the room for the presentation: "The proprieties
must be observed."
The brother Will Danaher spills 350 pounds gold on a table and announces:
"Three hundred and fifty pounds gold. A collern of furnishings,
linen and pewter goes with the sister of Will Danaher." Squire
Danaher signs papers to seal the marriage, and a matrimonial toast
is presented to the couple:
May their days be long, and full of happiness.
May their children be many, and full of health.
And may they live in peace, and freedom.
Danaher orders the refilling of the toast glasses,
and then proceeds to make a surprise, untimely pronouncement about
his own matrimonial intentions toward Widow Tillane:
Now today, I've given my sister in marriage.
My only sister. And now she's gone from the house of
Danaher. But what's in a house without a woman?...Where would
any men of us be without a woman? Why even Father Lonergan
had a mother....So, so, uh,...(he is prompted) so without further
eloquence, I will give you a toast to myself, who is soon to
be wed. (He glances at the stunned Widow Tillane and then shakes
Father Lonergan's hand.) All she has to do is to say that little
word. When's the happy day, Sarah darling?
The widow curtly rejects his inopportune proposal and
turns him down: "Have you lost the little sense you were born
with?...Who gave you the right to make such an announcement?" Realizing
that he has been betrayed and fooled by the Playfairs, Lonergan,
and Flynn, Danaher rebukes his own priest. Then he turns and accuses
Sean of being part of the deception:
Danaher: You got her by fraud and falsity. You
put them up to this.
Sean: I don't know what you're talkin' about.
Danaher: Aw, don't deny it.
Seething with anger for being tricked, Danaher swipes
the table clear of the 350 pounds of gold sovereigns and denies Mary
Kate her dowry: "This is something you won't get, now or ever.
Now get out of here." In a rage, Danaher angrily refuses to
give up Mary Kate's rightful dowry of money and furnishings. Sean
is uninterested in retrieving the 'dirty' money, but Mary Kate wants
to follow Gaelic custom and frantically gathers the coins from the
floor, in her wedding gown.
Sean: Come on, let's go home.
Mary Kate: No, not without my fortune. It's mine, mine and my
mother's before me and I'm not...
Sean is knocked cold by Danaher with a single punch.
As he lies unconscious on his back, he has an impressionistic flashback
to his fighting days in the boxing ring. In the montage, there is
a closeup of his anguished face as he stares down in horror at the
sight of the corpse of his knocked-out opponent. [In his hallucinatory
flashback, the red-trunked figure, lying dead on the floor of the
boxing ring, is Will Danaher!].
When he is revived, Sean takes Mary Kate to his cottage
for their honeymoon. She describes the importance of her life-long
dream to have her own possessions (and a sense of her own identity),
lamenting the fact that she doesn't have them for her hearth and
home - her domain. Friction develops between them on their wedding
night because he fails to understand. He doesn't immediately comply
with her demands to publicly fight for her dowry and furniture with
his fists (and for her freedom and independence). [She is not aware
that Sean has vowed never to fight again for money - because he killed
a man in the ring.] She interprets his indifference to her dowry
as personal indifference ("until you have my dowry, you haven't
got any bit of me - me, myself"). Heartbroken over remaining
a servant in a patriarchal society rather than a wife, she threatens
sexual blackmail and refuses to consummate their marriage:
Mary Kate: Ever since I was a little girl, I
dreamed of having my own things about me. (She points about
the room.) My spinnet over there, and a table here, and my
own chairs to rest upon. And a dresser over there in that corner,
and my own china and pewter shinin' about me. And now...
Sean: (placatingly) I didn't know you felt that way about it.
Seems like a lot of fuss and grief over a little furniture and
stuff. (They go outside.)
Mary Kate: It is a pretty cottage, isn't it?
Sean: Yeah, I think so. (He moves to embrace her.)
Mary Kate: (She pulls away.) Don't touch me! You have no right!
Sean: Whaddya mean, no right?
Mary Kate: I'll wear your ring, I'll cook, and I'll wash, and
I'll keep the land. But that is all. Until I've got my dowry
safe about me, I'm no married woman. I'm the servant I've always
been, without anything of my own!
Sean: That's ridiculous. You're my wife and...(She shuts the
bottom half of the cottage's front door on him.) What is this?
Mary Kate: Haven't I been tryin' to tell ya? - ...that until
you have my dowry, you haven't got any bit of me - me, myself.
I'll still be dreamin' amongst the things that are my own as
if I had never met you. There's three hundred years of happy
dreamin' in those things of mine and I want them. I want my dream.
I'll have it and I know it. I'll say no other word to you.
Sean: (bitter but beaten) All right. You'll have your dowry or
dot [dowry] or fortune or whatever you call it.
Mary Kate: Well, get it then.
She rebelliously bolts the bedroom door behind her
- locking and separating him from any part of her private life. Exasperated
and in a fighting mood, Sean raises his foot and kicks open their
locked bedroom door, folds down the covers on the bed, roughly grabs
her by the hair and turns her around to complain about her "mercenary
little heart":
There'll be no locks or bolts between us Mary
Kate except those in your own mercenary little heart.
He forcefully kisses and embraces her - she rests her
marital bouquet of flowers on his shoulder. For a moment, she submits
to him - and he tosses her like a sack of potatoes onto their bed
(collapsing it to the floor). To her surprise - rather than raping
her - he stomps out of the room. Sean slams the door shut and sleeps
on the floor of their parlor in his sleeping bag - they are married
in name only. He leaves her unravished - he doesn't force her to
sleep with him on their nuptial evening. The scene ends with Mary
Kate sobbing with her bouquet of flowers on their disheveled bed.
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