An Inspector Calls - Who is responsible for the death of Eva Smith?

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Laura Coles 9R

In the play An Inspector Calls the Inspector takes the audience on a journey through the life of Eva Smith leading up to her death and the part that each of the other characters played in it. By the end of the play we know that they were all guilty of mistreating someone, even if it wasn’t the same girl. However, if Eva Smith, Daisy Renton and the girl who came to the Brumley women’s council were all the same girl, and she subsequently died because of their actions, which character was most responsible for her death?

        The Inspector speaks first to Mr Birling, a respected and important member of the Brumley community. Just moments before he enters, Birling is talking of having to make your own way and look after yourself. This shows his attitude to towards the world; he doesn’t bother about other people unless they can help him. Birling was associated with Eva Smith because she worked at his factory. He tells us she was a good worker and was about to be promoted just before he ‘discharged her’. Mr Birling’s motive for firing Eva Smith was an economic one; Eva was one of the ringleaders of a group of workers who went on strike to get higher wages, twenty five shillings a week instead of twenty two and six. The strike did not last very long and Mr Birling allowed them to return at the normal rates except for four or five ringleaders, Eva Smith was one of them. Birling says it was his ‘duty to keep labour costs down’. He doesn't think he did anything wrong in firing Eva Smith because she had ‘far too much to say’ and ‘had to go’, and he does not feel guilt or responsibility for her death. However, he does accept what he did even if he doesn’t think it makes him responsible.

Later in the play, Birling is very relieved to find out the inspector was not really a police inspector. This reflects his personality from the beginning. He is fine if he looks after himself and doesn’t get into trouble because he wants a knighthood. It shows that he hasn’t changed his opinions and does not really feel any regret for his actions, even if they did help towards the death of an innocent girl.

I do not think Mr Birling is greatly responsible for the death of Eva Smith because was not unjust to her as an individual – she was simply one of the ringleaders. Also, Birling does not do anything illegal although it seems morally wrong to the audience and some of the other characters, he thought – at the time if not now – that what he did was the right course of action to take. However, even if he did not know and thought she could find another job easily, Birling started Eva Smith’s run of bad luck by dismissing her because she wanted better wages and took the risk of asking for them; he began the downward spiral. Mr Birling did to Eva Smith what he tries to do to the inspector; he abused his position as her boss and an important member of the community and selfishly fired her to gain profit.

The inspector’s next target is Sheila Birling. Sheila is the daughter of Mr Birling and recently engaged to Gerald Croft; it is the celebration of the engagement which brings the group together. Sheila is described as a pretty girl in her early twenties, very pleased with life and rather excited. At the start of the play she is portrayed as quite naïve and this is how Mr Birling treats her, telling the inspector ‘that’s enough of that’ when he tries to tell Sheila about Eva’s death and trying to settle things ‘quietly in a corner’. These comments show Mr Birling as an protective father but they also show that he doesn’t see that his daughter isn’t a little girl any more so he still treats her like one which could shock him when he finds out about Sheila’s involvement in the death.

The audience first works out that Sheila is involved when the inspector asks her to stay but we know the place of her involvement when he mentions Milwards, a shop where Sheila often went. Eva Smith was employed there two months after she left Mr Birling’s factory and the inspector tells us that she enjoyed it very much. Sheila realises her involvement when the inspector tells the group that Eva left Milwards because a customer complained and the Sheila realises that it was her and asks when it was. She asks more questions to the inspector about Eva Smith until she is shown a photograph, then she runs out of the room after recognising the picture. Here Birling shows again that he is protective of Sheila by calling her a ‘child’.

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When Sheila re-enters a while later she is ready to admit it was her who got Eva Smith fired from her second job. Sheila’s attitude towards her involvement is very different to her father’s and she seems very guilt stricken and full of remorse. Sheila tells the inspector and the other characters in the room of how she got Eva fired because she saw her exchanging a small smile with another shop assistant. It was while Sheila was trying a dress on and she had taken it to be mocking her ‘as if to say “doesn’t she look awful”’, making ...

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