In act one when the stage manager pulls Mr. Webb out of the play to talk with him on page 528, the lady in the box asks ‘Oh Mr. Webb? Mr. Webb is there any culture or love of beauty in Grover’s Corners?’. Mr. Webb her, there isn’t much culture the way she might think, but ‘…
we’ve got a lot of pleasures of a kind here: We like the sun comin’ up over the mountain in the morning, and we all notice a good deal about the birds. We pay a lot of attention to them. And we watch the change of the seasons…’ These are the things that the people of Grover’s Corners appreciate, the things we take for granted. Also in act one, after the choir rehearsal on page 532, Dr. and Mrs. Gibbs are gossiping about the town drunk.
Dr. Gibbs says ‘I guess I know more about Simon Stimson’s affairs than anybody in this town. Some people ain’t made for small-town life. I don’t know how that’ll end; but there’s nothing we can do but leave it alone.’ This shows that there is always someone that has things worse than you do. At the very beginning of act two when the stage manager tells that three years have gone by, but nothing has really changed, and the cycle continues. In act three at the beginning on page 547, the stage manager tells that nine years have gone by.
‘Gradual changes in Grover’s Corners.’ He then tells how horses are being replaced by Fords, and that people lock their doors now at night. Then he says, ‘You’d be surprised, though-on the whole, things don’t change much around here.’ Again this indicates the endless cycle. My idea of the theme of the play doesn’t differ all that much from Wilder’s theme. My idea of the theme only adds to Wilder’s theme. My idea does differ from Wilder’s a little bit. Because when you look at my theme and really start to think about it, seems a bit depressing, and it also makes you really think. Where Wilder’s theme just tells half of it, and really doesn’t serve to make you think about it all that much. ***NOTE*** I listed page numbers in this essay, and unless you have the Text Book Elements Of Literature Fourth Course published by Holt Rinehart and Winston, you will need to change the Page Numbers!!! This play is on the 10th grade Course of Study in the state of Alabama and probabbly in other states and grade levels as well!.