The four questions in the section on Class Discussions in Preparation for the Essay Assignment relate to the themes of the story. For classes that are not going to write the essay described in the first part of this Guide, those are probably the most important questions for class discussion. Other questions that relate to theme are 3, 5, 12 – 14, 18, 20 & 21.
1. See Questions Suitable for Any Film
2. The captain of the merchant ship Rights of Man tries to outrun the warship, pretends he cannot hear the orders coming from the warship, and sends Billy aloft in an effort to hide him. What are his reasons for doing this?
Suggested Response:
He does this because he knows that the warship will try to impress his best sailors into the Royal Navy.
3. As Billy is being rowed from the merchant ship to the man of war, he calls out, “Goodbye, old Rights of Man.” The naval officer in the row boat responds with anger and asks Billy what he means by this. Billy says that he means nothing. He is just saying goodbye. What irony is there in Billy’s salute to the merchant vessel as he is rowed toward The Avenger? What type of irony is this?
Suggested Response:
The irony lies in the fact that while Billy was innocently bidding his former ship farewell, he unknowingly described his actual situation. He was going to a ship in which he would have few rights as a man and in which his most basic right, the right to life, would be taken away. This is an example of dramatic irony because most of the audience knows something of what happens to Billy aboard the Royal Navy ship. This is also foreshadowing.
4. What do we learn about Billy in his interview with the officer as he signs on to his new ship?
Suggested Response:
Billy is shown to be innocent and good-natured. He does not know his age or his place of birth. He says he was “found one morning in a silk-lined basket hanging on the knocker of a good man’s door.” The Captain is impressed by this, wondering if Billy might have a parent who is an aristocrat. Billy laughs when the officer says he is a bastard. He is eager to please and not proud. Billy signs his name with an “X”; he is uneducated.
5. What troubled Billy about the lashing he witnessed aboard the ship?
Suggested Response:
Billy asks The Dansker about the flogging and is told that this form of punishment is the only solution to any problem. Even the victim of the flogging may not know what he has done wrong; it was just his turn. Billy is disturbed by the seemingly arbitrary use of power. He says flogging goes against a man’s “being a man.”
6. Compare Claggart’s costume to the clothing worn by the other characters. How does Claggart’s costume add to characterization?
Suggested Response:
Claggart wears only black. His dress is always neat and orderly. All of this is in contrast to the members of the crew, who wear light-colored clothing that is often in disarray. Billy is shown in light-colored clothing. The officers are neatly dressed and wear both white and black. The black of Claggart’s costume identifies Claggart as evil. The precision of Claggart’s dress is an important part of his personality. He tries to project the image of being governed by the rules which he secretly schemes to violate. Billy is innocent and dressed in light colored clothing.
7. It becomes apparent that Billy has a flaw. What is it?
Suggested Response:
Billy stammers. When asked why by The Dansker, he says that sometimes he cannot find his words. This is important as a symbol in the film since Billy, in his innocence cannot forebear evil and is at a loss for words in its presence. This flaw leads to Billy’s demise.
8. When Billy leaves his post to try to help Jenkins, the man tells Billy, “For the love of God, Billy, look to yourself.” What does Jenkins mean and what literary device is being used by the screenwriter through this statement?
Suggested Response:
Jenkins is aware that Claggart wants to destroy Billy, and leaving a post during a battle will usually result in harsh punishment. The literary device being used is foreshadowing. Billy needs to protect himself against Claggart.
9. After Jenkins falls from the spar and dies, Claggart lies about how it happened. Captain Vere then asks the men, “You were his messmates, does anyone here know how this occurred?” They are silent. What does this silence tell us about the men?
Suggested Response:
This tells us how afraid the men are of Claggart and how little they trust the officers on the ship. If they had trusted Captain Vere, they would have responded, and it would have been his responsibility to make sure that Claggart didn’t punish them for responding to the Captain. In the military, even today, there is a clear demarcation between officers and enlisted personnel.
10. After Kincaid yells out to Claggart, “Damn your bloody eyes,” and is sent to the brig to await his punishment, Captain Vere orders the ship to begin firing at a French vessel that is out of range. What purpose is served by this action?
Suggested Response:
The need to attend to their duties distracts the crew from the troubles with Jenkins and Kincaid.
11. Captain Vere gives a speech after Kincaid has cursed Claggart. What do we learn from this monologue?
Suggested Response:
Even though it becomes clear that Claggart was responsible for Jenkins’ death, Captain Vere must have order on his ship. He asserts his authority and threatens the men with “coin you know of” should they assert any rebellious spirit. We learn that Captain Vere sees the ship’s crew not as men but as part of the machinery of war. He says he will mold the men “into a weapon.” He is using fear to control the men.
12. When Claggart and Captain Vere discuss the question of how many lashes Kincaid should be given for cursing an officer, Claggart makes the point that the law must be served, or those in authority must give up the right of service. How does this argument relate to the central question posed by this story? What are the arguments for this proposition?
Suggested Response:
One theme of the story is that injustice results when the law is mechanically applied without a consideration of what is right in the circumstances. But there are strong arguments that go the other way and Claggart’s position states one of them. The arguments for Claggart’s position are that society needs order and that to get that order the law must be obeyed. People need to be able to rely on the law and the fact that the law will be enforced. This is especially true in a military unit involved in hostilities.
13. When Claggart and Captain Vere discuss the question of how many lashes Kincaid is to be given for cursing an officer, the Captain states that “behind every peacemaker is the gun, the jail, the gallows” and that “even the man who wields the whip cannot defy the code we must obey.” How does this statement relate to later events in the story?
Suggested Response:
Claggart, who is the man who, figuratively wields the whip, tries to defy the law by falsely accusing Billy of mutiny.
14. When Lt. Seymour questions Captain Vere about Claggart, the Captain says that he will give Claggart his head and let the law consume him. What point is being made here?
Suggested Response:
Captain Vere thoroughly trusts the power of law to deal with men as evil as Claggart. The Captain is so convinced of his point that he tells Seymour to learn the lesson well because one day he may be captain of the ship, thus foreshadowing his own demise.
15. On deck at night, Billy and Claggart talk. What does Billy say that threatens Claggart? What about Billy’s statement does Claggart find threatening?
Suggested Response:
Billy offers friendship against the obvious fact of Claggart’s loneliness. Billy does not understand the depth of Claggart’s evil, but he instinctively feels Claggart’s loneliness and, being a friendly soul, would like to help assuage it. Claggart says, “You would charm me, too?” and although he is tempted by Billy’s offer of friendship, Claggart keeps his heart closed. Claggart knows that his evil, will be threatened if he receives true friendship from someone who is good. Claggart is afraid of Billy Budd.
16. Billy prevents Kincaid from murdering Claggart. What is the irony in this incident?
Suggested Response:
Claggart follows this event by reporting that he caught Billy and others plotting a mutiny. Thus, Billy’s action in saving Claggart is used by Claggart to try to kill Billy. Billy would have been alive if he had looked the other way and allowed Kincaid to kill Claggart.
17. What can the audience read on Claggart’s face as he dies?
Suggested Response:
Claggart’s smile makes it clear that he feels that his evil is the victor in the battle with innocence; he is willing to be hurt to see innocence destroyed. Billy’s violence keeps Claggart’s world view intact, and that gratifies him. Claggart knows that Billy will be harshly punished for striking an officer.
18. In conversation with Lt. Seymour, Captain Vere makes an important point about what happens to justice when a military unit must prepare for battle. Is his point valid?
Suggested Response:
Captain Vere says that battle makes a mockery of justice and that justice and must be quick and expedient. This shows that Captain Vere is more concerned with the fate of his ship in the upcoming battles than with the issue of justice for Billy. Student opinions on the validity of this point will vary.
19. When The Dansker is questioned in Captain Vere’s quarters, he makes a point about what fear in the face of authority does to people. What does he say?
Suggested Response:
The Dansker says that he is in part to blame for what happened between Billy and Claggart because he was afraid of Claggart and did nothing about the injustices he saw. This implies that we are culpable when we do not speak out in defense of others. Edmund Burke, a British statesman and philosopher, said, “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.”
20. At the court-martial, name some of the arguments that are brought up in defense of Billy. Are the points valid?
Suggested Response:
One officer says that Billy is like a cripple because of his inability to speak and defend himself. He says that they cannot condemn a man for his handicap. Another officer says that to condemn Billy is to condone the lies that Claggart told and to make a mockery of self-defense. Another states that Billy was justified in killing Claggart, after the man made a false charge of perjury against Billy. Student opinions on the validity of the points will vary.
21. What arguments does Captain Vere use to convince the jury of officers to condemn Billy?
Suggested Response:
Captain Vere says that although condemning Billy to death may go against the men’s sense of right and wrong, conscience is a private matter and the officers are public men. He insists that they must follow the law and do their duty or else give up their posts. When the officers on the jury complain about the injustice to Billy, Captain Vere tells them that they do not deal with justice, but with the law, which is very clear about the punishment for striking a superior officer. Captain Vere says that he, too, would prefer to save Billy and challenges the court-martial jury to find a way, consistent with their duties, to spare him. They cannot. Billy is to be hanged.
22. What do we learn about innocence from the manner in which Billy hears the news that he is to die and from his last words before his hanging?
Suggested Response:
Innocence does not attribute blame. When Captain Vere tells Billy to use his hatred to conquer his fear, Billy says he does not feel fear. Billy states that he did his duty and Captain Vere is doing his. As he is about to be hanged, Billy calls out “God bless Captain Vere.” He forgives the Captain. Billy stays true to his innocence up to his death.
23. When Billy is awakened on the morning of his day to die, he is curled in bed in a child-like pose. He puts on a fancy pair of shoes, polished and new; he appears to be going to his death as if he were going to church. Billy looks in the eyes of every officer who had condemned him. He feels no regret, shame, or anger. What does this show about Billy Budd?
Suggested Response:
There may be several ways to express this, but the strongest is that these images and actions show that Billy is an innocent.