Mother Courage and Her Children

by

Bertolt Brecht

Mother Courage Character Analysis

The protagonist and title character is a middle-aged woman who works alongside the Swedish army, selling the soldiers food, alcohol, and supplies out of her wagon. Her real name is Anna Fierling, but everyone in the army has known her as “Mother Courage” ever since she famously drove her wagon through the middle of a fierce battle in Riga (modern-day Latvia) in 1621. She is dedicated and enterprising but also greedy and unempathetic. Her three children (Eilif, Kattrin, and Swiss Cheese) all follow her on her travels and die violent deaths during the play, in part because of her actions. Notably, they all have different fathers, whom she met on her various tours around Europe with the army. (It’s entirely possible that some or all of her children were the product of rape.) Still, her family is a cross-section of all Europe, which may be Brecht’s way of suggesting that the continent’s people are all kin and that World War II—like the Thirty Years’ War—would needlessly tear them apart. Over the course of the play, Mother Courage demonstrates that she will do almost anything to increase her profits, even when this means abandoning people who have proven loyal to her or putting her children in danger. She even despairs when the war ends and rejoices when it restarts because she thinks her commercial prospects improve when the fighting gets worse. Worse still, she refuses to help a family of dying peasants because they cannot afford to pay, and at the end of the play, she even joins up with the Catholic soldiers who just killed her beloved daughter, Kattrin, because she sees this as her best commercial opportunity. In a nutshell, Mother Courage represents the spirit of capitalism, which Brecht saw as one and the same as the spirit of war and imperial expansion.

Mother Courage Quotes in Mother Courage and Her Children

The Mother Courage and Her Children quotes below are all either spoken by Mother Courage or refer to Mother Courage. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
War, Failure, and Despair Theme Icon
).
Prologue Quotes

HERE’S MOTHER COURAGE AND HER WAGON!
HEY, CAPTAIN, LET THEM COME AND BUY!
BEER BY THE KEG! WINE BY THE FLAGON!
LET YOUR MEN DRINK BEFORE THEY DIE!
SABERS AND SWORDS ARE HARD TO SWALLOW:
FIRST YOU MUST GIVE THEM BEER TO DRINK.
THEN THEY CAN FACE WHAT IS TO FOLLOW—
BUT LET ‘EM SWIM BEFORE THEY SINK!

CHRISTIANS, AWAKE! THE WINTER’S GONE!
THE SNOWS DEPART, THE DEAD SLEEP ON.
AND THOUGH YOU MAY NOT LONG SURVIVE,
GET OUT OF BED AND LOOK ALIVE!

YOUR MEN WILL MARCH TILL THEY ARE DEAD, SIR,
BUT CANNOT FIGHT UNLESS THEY EAT.
THE BLOOD THEY SPILL FOR YOU IS RED, SIR,
WHAT FIRES THAT BLOOD IS MY RED MEAT.
FOR MEAT AND SOUP AND JAM AND JELLY
IN THIS OLD CART OF MINE ARE FOUND:
SO FILL THE HOLE UP IN YOUR BELLY
BEFORE YOU FILL ONE UNDERGROUND.

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif (speaker), Swiss Cheese (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Wagon, Alcohol
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 1 Quotes

(She draws a knife.) Yes, just you try, and I’ll cut you down like dogs! We sell cloth, we sell ham, we are peaceful people!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif, Top Sergeant, The Recruiting Officer
Page Number: 29
Explanation and Analysis:

Well, there’s yours, Eilif, my boy! (As EILIF takes the slip, she snatches it and holds it up.) See? A cross!

[…]

Take yours, Swiss Cheese. You should be a better bet—you’re my good boy. (SWISS CHEESE draws.) Don’t tell me it’s a cross? Is there no saving you either? Just look, Sergeant—a black cross!

[…]

(to KATTRIN) Now all I have left is you. You’re a cross in yourself but you have a kind heart. (She holds the helmet up but takes the slip herself.) Oh dear, there must be some mistake! Don’t be too kind, Kattrin, don’t be too kind—there’s a black cross in your path! So now you all know: be careful! Be very careful! (MOTHER COURAGE climbs on her wagon preparing to leave.)

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin, Top Sergeant
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 31-32
Explanation and Analysis:

When a war gives you all you earn
One day it may claim something in return!

Related Characters: Top Sergeant (speaker), Mother Courage
Page Number: 33
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 2 Quotes

MOTHER COURAGE. My eldest. It’s two years since I saw him. He must be high in favor—the Commander inviting him to dinner! And what do you have to eat? Nothing. The Commander’s guest wants meat! Take my advice: buy the capon. The price is one hundred hellers.

(The COMMANDER has sat down with EILIF and the CHAPLAIN.)

COMMANDER. (roaring) Dinner, you pig! Or I’ll have your head!

COOK. This is blackmail. Give me the damn thing!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Cook (speaker), The Swedish Commander (speaker), Eilif, The Chaplain
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 3 Quotes

I’m letting you have the bullets for two guilders. Dirt cheap. ’Cause I need the money. The Colonel’s been drinking for three days and we’re out of liquor.

Related Characters: The Ordnance Officer (speaker), Mother Courage
Related Symbols: Alcohol
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:

MOTHER COURAGE. I must get you two something to drink, or you’ll be making improper advances out of sheer boredom.

CHAPLAIN. That is indeed a temptation—said the Court Chaplain as he gave way to it. And who is this captivating young person?

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker), Kattrin, The Cook
Related Symbols: Alcohol
Page Number: 47
Explanation and Analysis:

COOK. And King Gustavus liberated Poland from the Germans. Who could deny it? Then his appetite grew with eating, and he liberated Germany from the Germans. Made quite a profit on the deal, I’m told.

CHAPLAIN. That is a calumny! The Swedish king puts religion first!

MOTHER COURAGE. What’s more, you eat his bread.

COOK. I don’t eat his bread: I bake his bread.

MOTHER COURAGE. He’ll never be conquered, that man, and you know why? We all back him up—the little fellows like you and me. Oh yes, to hear the big fellows talk, they ‘re fighting for their beliefs and so on, but if you look into it, you find they’re not that silly: they do want to make a profit on the deal. So you and I back them up!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker), The Cook (speaker), King Gustavus Adolphus
Page Number: 48
Explanation and Analysis:

YVETTE (re-enters, pale). You’ve done it—with your haggling. You can keep your wagon now. He got eleven bullets in him. I don’t know why I still bother about you, you don’t deserve it, but I just happened to hear they don’t think the cash-box is really in the river. They think it’s here. And they think you were in with him.

Related Characters: Yvette Pottier (speaker), Mother Courage, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:

SERGEANT. There’s a man here we don’t know the name of, but he has to be registered to keep the records straight. He bought a meal from you. Look at him. See if you know him. (He draws back the sheet.) You know him? (MOTHER COURAGE shakes her head.) What? You never saw him before he bought that meal? (MOTHER COURAGE shakes her head.) Lift him up. Throw him on the garbage dump. He has no one that knows him.

(They carry him off.)

Related Characters: The Sergeant and One Eye (speaker), Mother Courage, Swiss Cheese
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 4 Quotes

MOTHER COURAGE. You’re hungry. You’re angry. I understand.

YOUNG SOLDIER. Talking’ll get you nowhere. I won’t stand for injustice!

MOTHER COURAGE. How long? How long won’t you stand for injustice? One hour? Or two? It’s a misery to sit in the stocks: especially if you leave it till then to realize you do stand for injustice.

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Young Soldier (speaker)
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 6 Quotes

She’s finished. How would she ever get a husband now? And she’s crazy for children. Even her dumbness comes from the war. A soldier stuck something in her mouth when she was little. I’ll never see Swiss Cheese again, and where my Eilif is the Good Lord knows. Curse the war!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker), Eilif, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin
Page Number: 81
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 8 Quotes

Don’t tell me peace has broken out—I’ve gone and bought all these supplies!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker)
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

CHAPLAIN. Your intentions are only too transparent! (to MOTHER COURAGE:) But when I see you take peace between finger and thumb like a snotty old handkerchief, the humanity in me rebels! You want war, do you? Well, don’t you forget the proverb: who sups with the devil must use a long spoon!

MOTHER COURAGE. Remember what one fox said to another that was caught in a trap? “If you stay there, you’re just asking for trouble.” I’m not in love with war, Mr. Army Chaplain, and when it comes to calling people hyenas, you and I part company!

CHAPLAIN. Then why all this grumbling about the peace? Is it just for the junk in your wagon?

MOTHER COURAGE. My goods are not junk. I live off them.

CHAPLAIN. You live off war. Exactly!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 87-88
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 9 Quotes

MOTHER COURAGE. Kattrin! Where do you think you’re going? (She examines the bundle.) Ah! So you were listening ? I told him: nothing doing—he can have his lousy inn. (Now she sees the skirt and pants.) Oh, you stupid girl! Now what if I’d seen that, and you’d been gone! (KATTRIN tries to leave. Her mother holds her.) And don’t imagine I sent him packing on your account. It was the wagon. They can’t part me from my wagon. Now we’ll put the cook’s things here where he’ll find ’em, that silly man. You and I are leaving. (She climbs upon the wagon and throws the rest of the COOK’s few things down on to the pants.) There! He’s fired! The last man I’ll ever take into this business! Get into harness, Kattrin. This winter will pass like all the others.

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Kattrin, The Cook
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 101
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 11 Quotes

LIEUTENANT (pointing to the wagon on which KATTRIN has appeared). There’s another. (A SOLDIER pulls her out.) Is this everybody?

OLD PEASANT. That’s our son.

PEASANT WOMAN. And that’s a girl that can’t talk. Her mother’s in town buying up stocks because the shopkeepers are running away and selling cheap.

OLD PEASANT. They’re canteen people.

Related Characters: The Lieutenant (speaker), Old Peasant (speaker), Old Peasant Woman (speaker), Mother Courage, Kattrin
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 103
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 12 Quotes

LULLAY, LULLAY, WHAT’S THAT IN THE HAY?
THE NEIGHBOR’S KIDS CRY BUT MINE ARE GAY.
THE NEIGHBOR’S KIDS ARE DRESSED IN DIRT:
YOUR SILKS WERE CUT FROM AN ANGEL’S SKIRT.
THEY ARE ALL STARVING. YOU HAVE A CAKE
IF IT’S TOO STALE, YOU NEED BUT SPEAK.
LULLAY, LULLAY, WHAT’S RUSTLING THERE?
ONE LAD FELL IN POLAND. THE OTHER IS—WHERE?

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

OLD PEASANT. Have you no one left?

MOTHER COURAGE. Yes, my son Eilif.

OLD PEASANT. Find him then, leave her to us.

PEASANT WOMAN. We’ll give her a proper burial, you needn’t worry.

MOTHER COURAGE. Here’s a little money for the expenses. (She harnesses herself to the wagon.) I hope I can pull the wagon by myself. Yes, I’ll manage. There’s not much in it now. (The last regiment is heard passing.) Hey! Take me with you!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Old Peasant (speaker), Old Peasant Woman (speaker), Eilif
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 110-111
Explanation and Analysis:
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Mother Courage Quotes in Mother Courage and Her Children

The Mother Courage and Her Children quotes below are all either spoken by Mother Courage or refer to Mother Courage. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
War, Failure, and Despair Theme Icon
).
Prologue Quotes

HERE’S MOTHER COURAGE AND HER WAGON!
HEY, CAPTAIN, LET THEM COME AND BUY!
BEER BY THE KEG! WINE BY THE FLAGON!
LET YOUR MEN DRINK BEFORE THEY DIE!
SABERS AND SWORDS ARE HARD TO SWALLOW:
FIRST YOU MUST GIVE THEM BEER TO DRINK.
THEN THEY CAN FACE WHAT IS TO FOLLOW—
BUT LET ‘EM SWIM BEFORE THEY SINK!

CHRISTIANS, AWAKE! THE WINTER’S GONE!
THE SNOWS DEPART, THE DEAD SLEEP ON.
AND THOUGH YOU MAY NOT LONG SURVIVE,
GET OUT OF BED AND LOOK ALIVE!

YOUR MEN WILL MARCH TILL THEY ARE DEAD, SIR,
BUT CANNOT FIGHT UNLESS THEY EAT.
THE BLOOD THEY SPILL FOR YOU IS RED, SIR,
WHAT FIRES THAT BLOOD IS MY RED MEAT.
FOR MEAT AND SOUP AND JAM AND JELLY
IN THIS OLD CART OF MINE ARE FOUND:
SO FILL THE HOLE UP IN YOUR BELLY
BEFORE YOU FILL ONE UNDERGROUND.

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif (speaker), Swiss Cheese (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Wagon, Alcohol
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 1 Quotes

(She draws a knife.) Yes, just you try, and I’ll cut you down like dogs! We sell cloth, we sell ham, we are peaceful people!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif, Top Sergeant, The Recruiting Officer
Page Number: 29
Explanation and Analysis:

Well, there’s yours, Eilif, my boy! (As EILIF takes the slip, she snatches it and holds it up.) See? A cross!

[…]

Take yours, Swiss Cheese. You should be a better bet—you’re my good boy. (SWISS CHEESE draws.) Don’t tell me it’s a cross? Is there no saving you either? Just look, Sergeant—a black cross!

[…]

(to KATTRIN) Now all I have left is you. You’re a cross in yourself but you have a kind heart. (She holds the helmet up but takes the slip herself.) Oh dear, there must be some mistake! Don’t be too kind, Kattrin, don’t be too kind—there’s a black cross in your path! So now you all know: be careful! Be very careful! (MOTHER COURAGE climbs on her wagon preparing to leave.)

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin, Top Sergeant
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 31-32
Explanation and Analysis:

When a war gives you all you earn
One day it may claim something in return!

Related Characters: Top Sergeant (speaker), Mother Courage
Page Number: 33
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 2 Quotes

MOTHER COURAGE. My eldest. It’s two years since I saw him. He must be high in favor—the Commander inviting him to dinner! And what do you have to eat? Nothing. The Commander’s guest wants meat! Take my advice: buy the capon. The price is one hundred hellers.

(The COMMANDER has sat down with EILIF and the CHAPLAIN.)

COMMANDER. (roaring) Dinner, you pig! Or I’ll have your head!

COOK. This is blackmail. Give me the damn thing!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Cook (speaker), The Swedish Commander (speaker), Eilif, The Chaplain
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 3 Quotes

I’m letting you have the bullets for two guilders. Dirt cheap. ’Cause I need the money. The Colonel’s been drinking for three days and we’re out of liquor.

Related Characters: The Ordnance Officer (speaker), Mother Courage
Related Symbols: Alcohol
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:

MOTHER COURAGE. I must get you two something to drink, or you’ll be making improper advances out of sheer boredom.

CHAPLAIN. That is indeed a temptation—said the Court Chaplain as he gave way to it. And who is this captivating young person?

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker), Kattrin, The Cook
Related Symbols: Alcohol
Page Number: 47
Explanation and Analysis:

COOK. And King Gustavus liberated Poland from the Germans. Who could deny it? Then his appetite grew with eating, and he liberated Germany from the Germans. Made quite a profit on the deal, I’m told.

CHAPLAIN. That is a calumny! The Swedish king puts religion first!

MOTHER COURAGE. What’s more, you eat his bread.

COOK. I don’t eat his bread: I bake his bread.

MOTHER COURAGE. He’ll never be conquered, that man, and you know why? We all back him up—the little fellows like you and me. Oh yes, to hear the big fellows talk, they ‘re fighting for their beliefs and so on, but if you look into it, you find they’re not that silly: they do want to make a profit on the deal. So you and I back them up!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker), The Cook (speaker), King Gustavus Adolphus
Page Number: 48
Explanation and Analysis:

YVETTE (re-enters, pale). You’ve done it—with your haggling. You can keep your wagon now. He got eleven bullets in him. I don’t know why I still bother about you, you don’t deserve it, but I just happened to hear they don’t think the cash-box is really in the river. They think it’s here. And they think you were in with him.

Related Characters: Yvette Pottier (speaker), Mother Courage, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:

SERGEANT. There’s a man here we don’t know the name of, but he has to be registered to keep the records straight. He bought a meal from you. Look at him. See if you know him. (He draws back the sheet.) You know him? (MOTHER COURAGE shakes her head.) What? You never saw him before he bought that meal? (MOTHER COURAGE shakes her head.) Lift him up. Throw him on the garbage dump. He has no one that knows him.

(They carry him off.)

Related Characters: The Sergeant and One Eye (speaker), Mother Courage, Swiss Cheese
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 4 Quotes

MOTHER COURAGE. You’re hungry. You’re angry. I understand.

YOUNG SOLDIER. Talking’ll get you nowhere. I won’t stand for injustice!

MOTHER COURAGE. How long? How long won’t you stand for injustice? One hour? Or two? It’s a misery to sit in the stocks: especially if you leave it till then to realize you do stand for injustice.

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Young Soldier (speaker)
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 6 Quotes

She’s finished. How would she ever get a husband now? And she’s crazy for children. Even her dumbness comes from the war. A soldier stuck something in her mouth when she was little. I’ll never see Swiss Cheese again, and where my Eilif is the Good Lord knows. Curse the war!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker), Eilif, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin
Page Number: 81
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 8 Quotes

Don’t tell me peace has broken out—I’ve gone and bought all these supplies!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker)
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

CHAPLAIN. Your intentions are only too transparent! (to MOTHER COURAGE:) But when I see you take peace between finger and thumb like a snotty old handkerchief, the humanity in me rebels! You want war, do you? Well, don’t you forget the proverb: who sups with the devil must use a long spoon!

MOTHER COURAGE. Remember what one fox said to another that was caught in a trap? “If you stay there, you’re just asking for trouble.” I’m not in love with war, Mr. Army Chaplain, and when it comes to calling people hyenas, you and I part company!

CHAPLAIN. Then why all this grumbling about the peace? Is it just for the junk in your wagon?

MOTHER COURAGE. My goods are not junk. I live off them.

CHAPLAIN. You live off war. Exactly!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), The Chaplain (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 87-88
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 9 Quotes

MOTHER COURAGE. Kattrin! Where do you think you’re going? (She examines the bundle.) Ah! So you were listening ? I told him: nothing doing—he can have his lousy inn. (Now she sees the skirt and pants.) Oh, you stupid girl! Now what if I’d seen that, and you’d been gone! (KATTRIN tries to leave. Her mother holds her.) And don’t imagine I sent him packing on your account. It was the wagon. They can’t part me from my wagon. Now we’ll put the cook’s things here where he’ll find ’em, that silly man. You and I are leaving. (She climbs upon the wagon and throws the rest of the COOK’s few things down on to the pants.) There! He’s fired! The last man I’ll ever take into this business! Get into harness, Kattrin. This winter will pass like all the others.

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Kattrin, The Cook
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 101
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 11 Quotes

LIEUTENANT (pointing to the wagon on which KATTRIN has appeared). There’s another. (A SOLDIER pulls her out.) Is this everybody?

OLD PEASANT. That’s our son.

PEASANT WOMAN. And that’s a girl that can’t talk. Her mother’s in town buying up stocks because the shopkeepers are running away and selling cheap.

OLD PEASANT. They’re canteen people.

Related Characters: The Lieutenant (speaker), Old Peasant (speaker), Old Peasant Woman (speaker), Mother Courage, Kattrin
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 103
Explanation and Analysis:
Scene 12 Quotes

LULLAY, LULLAY, WHAT’S THAT IN THE HAY?
THE NEIGHBOR’S KIDS CRY BUT MINE ARE GAY.
THE NEIGHBOR’S KIDS ARE DRESSED IN DIRT:
YOUR SILKS WERE CUT FROM AN ANGEL’S SKIRT.
THEY ARE ALL STARVING. YOU HAVE A CAKE
IF IT’S TOO STALE, YOU NEED BUT SPEAK.
LULLAY, LULLAY, WHAT’S RUSTLING THERE?
ONE LAD FELL IN POLAND. THE OTHER IS—WHERE?

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Eilif, Swiss Cheese, Kattrin
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

OLD PEASANT. Have you no one left?

MOTHER COURAGE. Yes, my son Eilif.

OLD PEASANT. Find him then, leave her to us.

PEASANT WOMAN. We’ll give her a proper burial, you needn’t worry.

MOTHER COURAGE. Here’s a little money for the expenses. (She harnesses herself to the wagon.) I hope I can pull the wagon by myself. Yes, I’ll manage. There’s not much in it now. (The last regiment is heard passing.) Hey! Take me with you!

Related Characters: Mother Courage (speaker), Old Peasant (speaker), Old Peasant Woman (speaker), Eilif
Related Symbols: The Wagon
Page Number: 110-111
Explanation and Analysis: