The Fly in the Ointment

by

V. S. Pritchett

The Father Character Analysis

Harold’s father is a crooked businessman who is grandiose and occasionally aggressive. Whether he means to or not, he frequently belittles his son, even if he also feels tenderly for him at times. What’s more, his underhanded dealings have finally caught up to him, abruptly ending his 30-year career. Suddenly broke and directionless at age 65, he maintains a kind of stubborn optimism that by no means involves atonement for his dishonest ways. His talent for deluding himself allows him to change what he values at will, at times “thinking bigger” than everyone in the world, at other times renouncing money, and then reversing his feelings in this regard. Harold’s observation of his father’s apparent two faces highlights the older man’s duplicitous nature. One face signals his father’s grandstanding self-importance, and the other face reveals his essential cruelty, paranoia, and greed. A wannabe bigshot, on some level he seems to recognize his smallness and, in classic bullying fashion, he harbors outsized contempt for those visibly weaker than him.

The Father Quotes in The Fly in the Ointment

The The Fly in the Ointment quotes below are all either spoken by The Father or refer to The Father . 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:
Fathers and Sons Theme Icon
).
The Fly in the Ointment Quotes

The father was well-dressed in an excellent navy-blue suit. He was a vigorous, broad man with a pleased impish smile. The sunburn shone through the clipped white hair of his head and he had the simple, trim, open-air look of a snow man. The son beside him was round-shouldered and shabby, a keen but anxious fellow in need of a hair-cut and going bald.

Related Characters: Harold, The Father
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

“I’m all right,” the son said, smiling to hide his irritation. “I’m not worried about anything. I’m just worried about you. This—” he nodded with embarrassment to the dismantled showroom, the office from which even the calendars and wastepaper-basket had gone—“this—” what was the most tactful and sympathetic word to use?—“this is bad luck,” he said. “Bad luck?” said the old man sternly.

Related Characters: Harold (speaker), The Father
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

A different man was speaking, and even a different face; the son noticed for the first time that like all big-faced men his father had two faces. There was the outer face like a soft warm and careless daub of innocent sealing wax and inside it, as if thumbed there by a seal, was a much smaller one, babyish, shrewd, scared and hard.

Related Characters: Harold, The Father
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

“[…]what you want, what we all want, I say this for myself as well as you, what we all want is ideas—big ideas. We go worrying along but you just want bigger and better ideas. You ought to think big. Take your case. You’re a lecturer. I wouldn’t be satisfied with lecturing to a small batch of people in a university town. I’d lecture the world. You know, you’re always doing yourself injustice. We all do. Think big.”

Related Characters: The Father (speaker), Harold
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

“Yes, can’t you hear it? It’s peculiar how you can hear everything now the machines have stopped. It took me quite a time to get used to the silence. Can you see it, old chap? I can’t stand flies, you never know where they’ve been.”

Related Characters: The Father (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Fly
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

“Be careful,” said the son. “Don’t lose your balance.” The old man looked down. Suddenly he looked tired and old, his body began to sag and a look of weakness came on to his face. “Give me a hand, old boy,” the old man said in a shaky voice. He put a heavy hand on his son’s shoulder and the son felt the great helpless weight of his father’s body. “Lean on me.”

Related Characters: Harold (speaker), The Father (speaker)
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

“You know where I went wrong? You know where I made my mistake?” The son’s heart started to a panic of embarrassment. For heaven’s sake, he wanted to shout, don’t! Don’t stir up the whole business. Don’t humiliate yourself before me. Don’t start telling the truth. Don’t oblige me to say we know all about it, that we have known for years the mess you’ve been in, that we’ve seen through the plausible stories you’ve spread, that we’ve known the people you’ve swindled.

Related Characters: The Father (speaker), Harold
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

“Don’t say I want money,” the old man said vehemently. “Don’t say it. When I walk out of this place tonight I’m going to walk into freedom. I am not going to think of money. You never know where it will come from. You may see something. You may meet a man. You never know. Did the children of Israel worry about money? No, they just went out and collected the manna. That’s what I want to do.”

Related Characters: The Father (speaker), Harold
Page Number: 114
Explanation and Analysis:
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The Father Quotes in The Fly in the Ointment

The The Fly in the Ointment quotes below are all either spoken by The Father or refer to The Father . 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:
Fathers and Sons Theme Icon
).
The Fly in the Ointment Quotes

The father was well-dressed in an excellent navy-blue suit. He was a vigorous, broad man with a pleased impish smile. The sunburn shone through the clipped white hair of his head and he had the simple, trim, open-air look of a snow man. The son beside him was round-shouldered and shabby, a keen but anxious fellow in need of a hair-cut and going bald.

Related Characters: Harold, The Father
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

“I’m all right,” the son said, smiling to hide his irritation. “I’m not worried about anything. I’m just worried about you. This—” he nodded with embarrassment to the dismantled showroom, the office from which even the calendars and wastepaper-basket had gone—“this—” what was the most tactful and sympathetic word to use?—“this is bad luck,” he said. “Bad luck?” said the old man sternly.

Related Characters: Harold (speaker), The Father
Page Number: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

A different man was speaking, and even a different face; the son noticed for the first time that like all big-faced men his father had two faces. There was the outer face like a soft warm and careless daub of innocent sealing wax and inside it, as if thumbed there by a seal, was a much smaller one, babyish, shrewd, scared and hard.

Related Characters: Harold, The Father
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

“[…]what you want, what we all want, I say this for myself as well as you, what we all want is ideas—big ideas. We go worrying along but you just want bigger and better ideas. You ought to think big. Take your case. You’re a lecturer. I wouldn’t be satisfied with lecturing to a small batch of people in a university town. I’d lecture the world. You know, you’re always doing yourself injustice. We all do. Think big.”

Related Characters: The Father (speaker), Harold
Page Number: 111
Explanation and Analysis:

“Yes, can’t you hear it? It’s peculiar how you can hear everything now the machines have stopped. It took me quite a time to get used to the silence. Can you see it, old chap? I can’t stand flies, you never know where they’ve been.”

Related Characters: The Father (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Fly
Page Number: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

“Be careful,” said the son. “Don’t lose your balance.” The old man looked down. Suddenly he looked tired and old, his body began to sag and a look of weakness came on to his face. “Give me a hand, old boy,” the old man said in a shaky voice. He put a heavy hand on his son’s shoulder and the son felt the great helpless weight of his father’s body. “Lean on me.”

Related Characters: Harold (speaker), The Father (speaker)
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

“You know where I went wrong? You know where I made my mistake?” The son’s heart started to a panic of embarrassment. For heaven’s sake, he wanted to shout, don’t! Don’t stir up the whole business. Don’t humiliate yourself before me. Don’t start telling the truth. Don’t oblige me to say we know all about it, that we have known for years the mess you’ve been in, that we’ve seen through the plausible stories you’ve spread, that we’ve known the people you’ve swindled.

Related Characters: The Father (speaker), Harold
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

“Don’t say I want money,” the old man said vehemently. “Don’t say it. When I walk out of this place tonight I’m going to walk into freedom. I am not going to think of money. You never know where it will come from. You may see something. You may meet a man. You never know. Did the children of Israel worry about money? No, they just went out and collected the manna. That’s what I want to do.”

Related Characters: The Father (speaker), Harold
Page Number: 114
Explanation and Analysis: