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Justice Play

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John Galsworthy wrote Justice in 1910.

It is a social tragedy and is one of the gr


eatest works of Galsworthy. In this play he makes an attack on the evils and sho
rtcomings in the English law and judicial system. There is a strong attack on En
glish prison system, especially solitary confinement. It is a plea for greater s
ympathy for the derelicts and waifs of the society. In this play Galsworthy show
s that a man who commits some theft under very straitened circumstances like Fal
der should not be subjected to the course of law, because it is our society that
is responsible for turning innocent people in to sinners. The speech of Mr. Fro
me in the court of law represents Galsworthy s attitude towards the subject of jus
tice and law courts. In short, it is a play that deals with the problems of the
criminal and the treatment of the society towards such criminals.
Social Background The late Victorian period and the following Edwardian era saw
Britain at the height of her power. Industriliazation and colonization led to th
e accumulation ofimmense wealth in the hands of a few. Ownership of land account
ed for much of the wealth, and it is significant to note that in 1911 one percen
t of the population owned sixty-six percent of the land in Britain. The populati
on itself was divided into broad classes- the well-heeled upper class, the wellto-do middle class and the poverty- striken working class. The advent of the ind
ustrial era saw the emergence of the new aristocracy of industrialists, who form
ed a distinct class of their own- the new rich. These people thrived on human pr
ofitmaking machinery and wielded enormous power in every sphere of life. They li
ved pampered lives, cared for by a retinue of servants. The middle class of sala
ried professionals- the so called white caller workers- were also adequately cus
hioned against hardships. This class earned the contempt of contemporary writer s
for their smugness, hypocrisy and dogged opposition to any form of change. There
was also the lower-middle class; the clerks in offices, the petty
shopkeepers, people who looked after other people s money and property. Both the p
owerful rich and the educated middle-class were indifferent to the desperate pli
ght of the working class, who lived a sordid, often brutal existence in the slum
s that had mushroomed around factories in industrial towns. The miserable life a
nd poverty of the slum-dwellers was deplored in general but the task of social u
plift was neglected by gove officials and philanthropists alike. The years in be
tween 1890 to 1940 witnessed sweeping, often cataclysmic shifts on power, causin
g great deal of physical suffering and spiritual disillusionment. Revolutionary
ideas such as those of Darwin earlier in 1850, and now of Freud plunged people i
n doubt and uncertainity. The very foundations on which human beings had based t
heir assumptions about stability and rationality were crumbling. The time was ri
pe for change. Thus, an undercurrent of thoughtful criticism began surfacing slo
wly. The new demand was for liberalism in politics and reforms on socialistic li
nes in England. The victory of the Liberal Party in the General Elections of 190
6 in England left none in doubt about which way the tide was turning. For the fi
rst time there were thirty representatives of the Labour Party amongst the newly
elected members of English Parliament. They were supported by the trade unions
and their votes enabled the Liberals to pass many bills implementing reforms, fo
r example in 1907, income tax for lower wage earners was reduced, and in 1908, p
ensions and Labour exchanges were introduced. The Liberals were in favour of fre
edom in politics, religion and in trade; their reforms were based on humaniterio
n principles- an attitude that Galsworthy shared. The fifty years bridging the t
urn of the century were, therefore, witness to changes in technology, patterns o
f work, power and class relationships. A novelist writing during this period wou
ld have had much to write about, but the age failed to produce any truly represe
ntative political fiction. It is only in the sparkling social satire of Wilde an
d Shaw or in the brooding novels of Hardy and in Galsworthy s realism, that we fin
d a partial reflection of this eventful period.
Galsworthy was a social reformer. He was a philanthropist and a political philo
sopher. He rose to be the poor and downtrodden classes of society. He was deeply
pained to discover how the poor class of society suffered, pined and languished
away under a number of tyrannies inflicted upon them by the rich and ruling cla
ss of the people. He had seen the naked reality of society and felt aghast at th
e innumerable social, economic and political evils that prevailed in

his day. He sought to reform those evils through his literary works. Each of his
plays, therefore, deals with one or the other social, economic and political pr
oblem.
Justice throws light on some glaring shortcomings in the contemporary English l
aw and judicial system. He says that law is blind, feelingless and lifeless proc
ess. It crushes into powder anybody who is entangled in its network. It shows no
sympathy to man on the score of basic human temptations and infirmities. It doe
s not recognize the sentiment behind an action. It judges a man on the score of
his tangible actions and completely ignores the sentiments behind
the action, however, noble they might be. The judicial system, likewise, is a me
chanical process.
It is heartless, unscrupulous and unfair. It is a malignant process in which inn
umerable innocent
and noble hearted men are victimized. The wheels of the chariot of law keep on r
evolving and
men are caught every day and crushed under them. Galsworthy expresses his views
through the
words of Mr. Frome: - Justice is a machine that, when someone has once given in t
he starting
push, rolls on of it. (Act-II, P.-24)
It is this idea that has been developed in this play. Falder, the hero of this p
lay, is a noblehearted
young man of 23 years old. He is not a criminal by nature. He has no marks of a
professional criminal upon his face. But circumstances compel him to commit a cr
ime in a
maddening fit of mental excitement. He loves a woman whose life is in danger. He
wants to help
her but he has no money. It is the question of now or never before him. In this
state of mind a
cheque of nine pounds is given to him by his employer for encashment. He is so e
xcited and
emotionally agitated that he forgets the sense of good and bad and right and wro
ng. In a
maddening fit of excitement, he adds zero after the figure 9 and ty after the word
nine and thus
gets ninety pounds from the bank. All this was done in the course of just four f
atal minutes. As
soon as he gets the money, good sense prevails upon him. He feels ashamed of his
deed and
heartily wishes tat it could be undone. But it is too late. He thinks of throwin
g away the money
and flinging himself before a bus but his attachment with his beloved fails him
to do so.
Both John Galsworthy s strengths and weaknesses as a dramatist derive from his
commitment to the ideas and methods of realistic drama. He was neither a religio
us man nor a
political activist, and his plays spoke for no specific ideology or orthodoxy, b
ut he believed that
every grouping of life and character has its inherent moral; and the business of
the dramatist is so
to pose the group as to bring that moral poignantly to the light of the day. Thi
s meant, as he said
in, Something Platitudes Concerning Drama that a drama must be shaped so as to hav
e a spire
ofmeaning. Such a theory of drama attempts two mutually contradictory tasks; fir
st, the
objective, balanced, impartial depiction of reality, and second, the embodiment
of the
playwright s subjective, ethical, emotional response in the posing or shaping of a
moral spire of

meaning. Galsworthy a plays are secular morality plays. His gentlemanly didacticis
m issues in
dramaticsermons that attempt to evoke sympathy and understanding for the human c
ondition and
that teach the humanistic creeds of civility, compromise and fair play. In Galsw
orthy s plays, the
sentimental or melodramatic pointing of a moral frequently undercuts the attempt
to depict
faithfully the problems of individual characters orsocial groups. Throughout Gal
sworthy s
dramatic works, there is a tension between oppressive moralism and melodramatic
theatricality.
As critic Allardyce Nicoll has observed, Galsworthian realism and the Socialist r
ealism tend to
suffer from the same kind of the pathetic complaint that the deplorable and even
tawdry
sentimentalism. 6
Galsworhty has some definite views about the art of plot construction. A good plo
t , he writes, is that sure edifice which slowly rises out of the interplay of circ
umstances on temperament within the enclosing atmosphere of an idea. A human bei
ng is the best plot . This shows that he made the plot subordinate to character. H
is plots are based on the study of the characters. He reverses the Aristotelian
conception of the relationship between plot and character. With Aristotle plot i
s first and character is second. With Galsworthy character is first and plot is
second.
Galsworthy s primary aim in writing plays was to make known to the complacent Vic
torian
public, certain deep-rooted evils in society. As he took up a basic social probl
em-for instance,
penal servitude in Justice, in which he advocated amelioration of prison laws- G
alsworthy made
a thorough investigation of the existing system which caused the problem. He the
n adopted the
naturalistic technique to project the situation dramatically, without much embel
lishment. The
portrayal of stark reality had the effect of arousing public conscience and Just
ice illustrates this
point. The plot reveals the careful economy exercised, by the author, in its con
struction. Each
character and every scene is strictly functional, offering a specific aspect of
the subject, and thus
building up a complete picture of the situation. The plot itself is simple and s
traitforward. The
action takes place over a period of two and a half years. It is a four act play,
moving from the
lawyer s office- the scene of crime- to the courtroom, thence to the prison, and b
ack again to the
office. The circular motion of events serves to emphasize the relentless motion
(chariot-wheel) of
Justice, which crushes those very victims of society whom it should protect. Iro
ny plays an
important role in the progress of events in Justice. Falder, an essentially hone
st man at the
beginning of the play, has become a vagrant by the end of the play, rejected by
the society. Ruth,
for whose sake he commited a crime, has become her employer s mistress in return f
or the
material support he gives her, and Mr. Cokeson and the Hows, who want to help Fa
lder, can not

do so. Falder observes; nobody wishes you harm, but they down you all the same. Hi
s death, it
appears in retrospect, was inevitable. Galsworthy adheres to the traditional con
cept of the
interdependence of plot and character. Unity of action is maintained in the grad
ual unravelling of
the theme- that of the unjust and inhuman treatment inflicted on prisoners in th
e name of
justice . Justice is a powerful social tragedy. It is a strong satire on the conte
mporary English
system of law and judiciary. Galsworthy brings into light the glaring shortcomin
gs and defects in
the legal system of England. He says that law is a blind and inhuman process. La
w does not take
into consideration human psychology and inate human infirmities. The British jud
icial system is
unfair and unscrupulous. It is a malignant process in which innumerable innocent
and noble
intentioned men are victimized. The chariot-wheels of the system of law continue
to revolve
furiously and innumerable innocent men are caught into them and crushed to powde
r. The
prisons are like an ill-fated ship in which thousands of prisoners perish. Once
a man is caught
and convicted to imprisonment, there is no escape for him. Once a man puts his s
tep into the
cage, there is no withdrawl possible for him. It is a process of completing the
crime. This is the
idea behind this social tragedy Justice. This idea is brought home through the c
onviction and
death of an innocent and noble hearted young man, Falder.
This act introduces the characters and the critical situation from which the dr
amatic
conflict arises. Falder is a junior clerk in the prestigious solicitor s firm of J
ames and Walter
How. Cokeson, the Managing Clerk, is annoyed by Ruth Honeywill, who is desperate
to meet
Falder. He relents when Falder arrives for work and allows them to speak to each
other privately.
Ruth tells Falder that her husband has again been violent with her, this time al
most killing her,
and she has left home along with her children. Falder sympathises and asks her t
o meet him at
11.45 near the booking office. The desperation of both is apperant, though their
destination is
unknown. Their plan is obviously a secret one.
A little later, Walter How discovers that the firm s bank balance is much lower t
han he
had estimated? The cheque-book counter-foils reveal the fact that an unauthorize
d sum of ninety
pounds has been withdrawn during the past week. Walter remembers having signed a
cheque for
nine pounds only. James, his father, reminds him of his bad habit of leaving spa
ce after his
figures on a cheque and they realize that someone has taken advantage of this fa
ct. Suspicion
first falls on Davis, an erstwhile employee who has recently left for Australia.
However, the bank
cashier, Cowley, is able to identify Falder as the person who encashed the chequ
e in question.

When Falder is confronted with the evidence, he denies having anything to do wi


th the
matter. However, his alibi falls to pieces when Walter remembers that the counte
rfoil could only
have been altered after Davis left for Australia, the cheque-book having been in
his possession
until after Davis departure. Cornered, Falder confesses his guilt and although Wa
lter and
Cokeson plead for leniency, James as the head of the firm, decides to prosecute.
DitectiveSergeant
Wister then arrives and takes the unhappy young man, Falder, away.
This act comprises the trial of Falder. The scene is a realistc dramatic presen
tation of the
proceedings of a law court. Witnesses are called and cross-examined. The evidenc
e of Falder and
Ruth reveals their secret love affair. She, as the victim of an unhappy marriage
, longs to leave
her husband and marry Falder. Falder, it is revealed, was driven to desperation
on seeing the
marks of violence on Ruth-evidence of er husband s ill- treatment of her. In need
of money, he
was tempted on seeing the cheque, but can not recall altering it or any of the e
vents, during the
time he took it to the bank to encash. Only after the deed was done and the mone
y in his hands,
did the realization of the enormity of his offence dawn on him. He could have ch
osen to return
money and confess but instead used it to buy their passage.
The interest in this act arises out of the arguments of the two counsels Frome a
nd
Cleaver. Frome bases his arguments on humanitarian principles and pleads for a p
ardon on the
grounds of temporary insanity. The prosecution counsel Cleaver however, demolishes
Frome s arguments with calculated effectiveness. The jury and the judge are dispos
ed to believe
his argument and the jury declares Falder to be guilty. The judge sums up the ca
se, referring to
the rsponsibilities of the administrator of justice. Falder is sentenced to thre
e years penel
servitude. In this scene, Galsworthy indirectly points out the lapses in the leg
al system,
particularly the lack of sympathetic understanding and of any humane attitude of
the judge
towards human failings.
There are three scenes in this act, all in a prison where the life of the priso
ners and the
attitudes of prison officials are clearly delineated.
In the first scene, the playwright introduces the Governer of the prison, Capta
in Danson.
He has a military bearing and his mutilated hand and Victoria Cross proclaim him
to be a war
hero. He is speaking to the chief warder of the prison, Wooder. They discuss a w
eapon which has
been found in a convict s room. A littlelater the prison chaplain enters. While th
e governer is
compassionate man, both the warder and chaplain are apathetic towards the prison
er s. The
governor then receives a visitor- Cokeson- who has come to see Falder. In his ra
mbling fashion,
Cokeson explains the reason for the visit Falder s funny look and Ruth s worry. The pr

ison
official s are amused to discover thet Cokeson thinks of a prison term as a course
of treatment
prescribed for a patient. The doctor is called and he assures the visitor that F
alder is as well as
can be expected. Cokeson insists that it is Falder s state of mind that must be ca
red for, and only
leaves on the assurance that the Governor will look into the matter.
In scene -II, the governor visits the cells of those convicts who are going thr
ough the
period of solitary confinement. The playwright has taken this opportunity of rev
ealing the state
of mind and thoughts of these unfortunate men. The common complaint is of monoto
ny, where
the prisoners find the silence over-powering. Falder admits to being nervous but
tells the
sympathetic governor that he is quite well, mentally. The doctor too findsnothin
g wrong with his
health but admits that Falder would be better off working in the shops (or the w
orkrooms where
prisoners were obliged to do hard labour). The governor reflects that it is, aft
er all, Christmas
Day. The irony of people celebrating the birth of a savior, within the bleak wal
ls of a convict
prison is emphasized by the playwright.
Scene-III is the climax of the plot. Here, the entire effort of the playwright
has gone into
depicting the agony of the convict who undergoes solitary confinement. There are
no words
spoken, but the mute distress of Falder is used to convince the audience of the
unfairness of this
form of punishment. The scene culminates with Falder banging his fists against t
he iron door of
the cell the symbol of the agonized human soul, yearning for freedom.
In this final act, Galsworthy has presented the resolution of the plot. The sce
ne is once
more the office of James and Walter How, two years later. Ruth, as in the first
act, arrives early
in the morning and begs Mr. Cokeson to find a job for Falder in the firm. She ha
s met him after
his release from prison and she describes his desperation for a job. Cokeson agr
ees to help, but is
dismayed and annoyed when Falder arrives in the office, immediately after Ruth s d
eparture.
Cokeson has already heard about Ruth s misfortunes how she has had to become her
employer s mistress in order to support her children, having left her husband. Fal
der s condition
worries him further, for the young man seems to have lost his interest in life a
strange thing in
one so young. Rejected even by his own family, the only joy in his life is the l
ove and support of
Ruth.
The two partners come in while Cokeson is speaking to Falder. Sending the young
man
out of the room, Cokeson appeals to James How to re-employ him. James is relucta
nct to have an
ex-convict working in the firm, but unbends after Cokeson continues to plead wit
h him.
However, his agreement is conditional because he is adamant that Falder should d
issociate

himself from Ruth. Falder is then tackled by James but surprisingly he remains f
irm in his
resolve to be with Ruth. James then prevails upon Ruth to give up Falder for his
own good.
Miserable and helpless she agrees. Cokeson sends Falder inside to give him time
to cope with his
unhappiness. It seems as if history is repeating itself, when Detective- Sergean
t Wister appears,
once more looking for Falder. This time it is because Falder, as an ex-convict,
has failed to report
himself to the police and they have also had reports that he has been trying to
secure employment
on the basis of forged references. James refuses to reveal Falder s whereabouts, b
ut Wister,
seeing his cap lying on the table, realizes Falder is on the premises.
It is a pathetic sight as he leads the doomed young man away. A few minutes lat
er,
Falder commits suicide by jumping from the staircase. There is an overwhelming s
ense of
sadness at the waste of a young man s life, and Cokeson s consoling words; He is safe
with
gentle Jesus (Act-IV, P.-63), hang in the air as the curtain falls.
Interpretation of the Word Justice :- The word Justice can be interpreted in various
ways. At
the fundamental level it stands for the principle of justness, fairness and impa
rtiality and implies
moral rightness. The word also refers to the functioning of the legal system- th
e dispensation of
the impartial judgement by the process of the law. Justice is, further, the titl
e conferred on a
judge. Justice, in retrospect, has ironic undertones for whereas we are led to e
xpect conduct in
accordance with the principle of justness, what Galsworthy actually exposes is t
he injustice and
iniquity of man-made systems of law.
The whole play is a caustic comment on the discrepancy between the intrinsic na
ture of
the term justice and the administration of it in the law courts. Falder s act of f
orgery is a crime in
the eyes of the society but the punishment meted out to him is out of proportion
with the
seriousness of the offence. Galsworthy uses as his mouthpiece the young attorney
, Hector Frome,
who indicts the legal system as being least concerned with human character, situ
ation and
suffering. His rhetorical question Is a man to be lost because he is bred and born
with a weak
character? underlines this ruthless aspect of so-called justice and his warning Impr
ison him as
a criminal, and I affirm to you that he will be lost goes unheeded by judge and j
ury. Falder is
imprisoned in the cage of the Law, never to escape.
The playwright raises serious questions about the fundamental purpose of justic
e is it
meant only for punishing the wrongdoer or is it intended for correcting the erri
ng individual and
rehabilitating him as a responsible and trustworthy member of society? Justice i
s an illusive term
and Galsworthy s intention is to make the audience pause and ponder over the meani
ng of such

an abstract word. In the play, Falder and Ruth appear as puny creatures, lost in
the complicated
labyrinth of the law, from which they can never emerge to freedom. Their only op
tion is to make
an unsavoury compromise with the situation. In Ruth s case, she leaves her husband
and
becomes the mistress of her employer, in Falder s case; he forges references to ge
t a job after
leaving prison. Death is, of course, the last resort and Falder, caught in the v
ortex of social
forces, commits suicide. The tragic irony is that the symbolic blindness of impa
rtiality of Justice
has unfortunately become the blindness of complete indifference. The wrongdoer i
s punished
well and truly- but has Justice been done?
This tragedy made a powerful impact on the social life and judiciary of England
. The
legisletures became aware of the heartless process of law. Galsworthy made furth
er personal
appeals in the press and to the Prime Minister of England. In the end this trage
dy led to the
revision of the rules relating to solitary confinement. Galsworthy makes an impo
rtant note about
it in his diary, Justice made a great sensation, especially in Parliamentary and
official circles,
Winston Churchill, the new Home Secretary, and Ruggles-Brise, head of the Prison
Commission
both witnessed it, the first with sympathy, the second with a sinking sensation.
Reinforcing
previous efforts the net result was that solitary confinement was reduced to thr
ee months for
recidivists, and to one month for intermediates and star class. Justice is thus o
ne of the most
important sociological plays of the twentieth century.
The great dramatists of the past ages like Sophocles, Shakespeare and others we
re
concerned with the fundamental feelings of the human heart like love, hate, jeal
ousy, ambition,
madness etc. but the modern dramatist looks at the life around him and wants to
present it in his
plays. He finds that man to-day is confronted with numerous problems. So the mod
ern dramatist
wants to tackle these problems and to present modern life truthfully. His plays,
therefore, get
involved in the presentation of social, political, moral, personal and domestic
problems. These
plays which deal realistically with the manifold problems of the modern man were
given the
name realistic social play or the problem play by Sydney Grundy. The pioneer of
this new type
of drama was Henrik Ibsen, a Norwegian dramatist. He started discussing in his p
lays the various
problems of society-home, sex, herediatery diseases etc. in England this trend w
as followed by
many dramatists such as St. John Hankin, Stanley Houghton, Granville-Barker etc.
but the real
disciple of Ibsen was the great playwright- George Barnard Shaw. John Galsworhty s
all plays
are also realistic social plays or the problem plays.

Galsworthy was a social reformer by temperament. He had a warm heart and he had
a
great sympathy with individuals who come into conflict with society and its inhu
man and pitiless
laws and institutions and are crushed down in the process. All his social traged
ies deal with
various social, domestic, moral and legal problems.
The play Justice is a social tragedy. It deals with the life of a common man, a j
unior
clerk, William Falder. He commits a forgery under the pressing need of money for
helping the
wretched woman, Ruth Honeywill. She is tortured by her husband and Falder wants
to drag her
out of that drudgery. Falder is sentenced to three years rigorous imprisonment f
or the act of
forgery. But when he is released, he is not treated as a citizen of the civilize
d society. He tries his
best to get some re-employment but he could not get job at all. When at last he
goes to James, he
is again arrested by Wister on another charge of forgery. But being afraid of th
e horrible prison
life, Falder throws himself down and finishes his life. Thus the whole play is a
tragedy, but it is
not Shakespearean or Greek or the Classical type of tragedy. Galsworthy has foll
owed none of
the preceding tragedy writers. In Arstocracy or Monarchy, the aristocrat or the
monarch must be
made to suffer to give effect to tragedy. Shakespeare s heroes were aristocrats or
monarchs.
Galsworthy, on the other hand, was writing in an age of democracy and in a democ
racy it is the
common man that suffers. That is why Galsworthy s all the suffering heroes are fro
m the
common stock.
In the age of democracy nobody is a monarch but every common man has got an
importance of his own. In democracy man is important. His merits and conditions
are important.
Galsworthy s tragedies, therefore, revolve round the miserable and society-torture
d life of the
common man. Here the common man is crushed not by any super-natural power or by
gods but
he is crushed by the force of an impersonal blind faith of social conventions an
d customs.
The same case is in Justice . Ruth can not get divorce from her husband easily. Fa
lder
and Ruth can not lead their life happily together though they love each other in
tensly. Their
relationship was against the existing Victorian morality. The conventions, custo
ms, laws, code of
conduct and the morals are all the creations of society. In the Victorian Englan
d people were
very particular about morality. That is why Falder, once declared as a criminal
can never get an
employment in the civilized society and he has to die of hunger. In the words of
A. Nicoll, the
heroes of Galsworthy s dramas are the unseen fates of modern existance 7
. Falder and Ruth are
the victims of the rigidity of modern existence. Even the educated people and th
e men of social
status like James can not stand against the blind social conventions. Therefore,

we can say that


the play Justice is a social tragedy which does not invoke in us awe but it cert
ainly invokes pity
and pathos for the hero.
Social Realism
The social injustice involved in the treatment mated out to outcasts like priso
ners,
vagabonds and certain type of immoral persons who embrace immoral in the plays l
ike Justice,
Windows, Escape, The Pigeon, Exiled, The Silver Box, The Fugitive, Old English a
nd The
Exiled. The social evils of imprisonment, unemployment and immorality are outcas
ts in these
plays in order to bring to the playgoing people, a realization of the seriousnes
s and intensity of
these problems. The dramatist believes in the inner goodness of the man and show
s that
criminality is the common law of humanity. The detestable life of the prisoners
and the outrazing
of prisoners when they come out of the prison, back to society are depicted in J
ustice. The
dramatist brings home through his plays that understanding and sympathy, rather
than
ostracization and cruelty, would do much better to rehabilitate the prisoners ba
ck into society.
Justice mainly dwells on the circumstance under which the crime is commited and
the
injustice of sentence of solitary confinement demonstrates through imaginative l
iterature. The
dramatist shows the problem of crime and penel servitude from the humanitarian p
oint of view.
He also shows how inevitable circumstances force the young man to commit a crime
. His love
for Ruth is earnest and his sympathy for her is genuine, for trying to releave h
er from the
brutality of her husband, he pays very heavy price. The play Justice impresses o
n the audience
how solitary confinement crushes the spirit of Falder, the tragic hero of this p
lay. His mental
agony, sorrow and despair are powerfully presented in act III scene III in which
not a single
word is uttered by Falder. It shows that he is tortured from within. When Falder
comes out of the
prison, he is completely broken in spirit and in body. He is just a skin and bon
es. When Mr.
Cokeson enquires about his health, he answers in a hopeless tone that he is aliv
e.
Allardyce Nicoll says, In Justice we feel the waste implied by Falder s suicide, and
the same
spirit is trenchantly expressed in The Mob, The Pigeon, The Eldest Son, The Fugu
tivesand
Loyalties- all alike in producing this atmosphere and in making the faiths of ma
n his masters. 8
A. C. Ward remarks, Justice is a commentary upon the prison administration of that
period. 9
In the words of W. L. Phelps, Justice has less equality in the scales than its t
itle would seem to
demand. 10

George Samson says, Justice is a legal diagram used to harrow the feelings of th
e audience
with the horrers of the prison life. 11
R. H. Coats says, On the whole Galsworthy s climaxes are good, they are not include
d in his
every play, but where they do occur, they are reached naturally and inevitably b
y a kind of sure
pointing forward and acceleration from the beginning. 12
John Galsworthy himself remarks,
arliamentary
and official circles. 13

Justice made a great sensation, especially in P

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