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Throwing a Plant in the ocean is great metaphor


That was Mister Roberts one great Military victory. So what happens, the Captain just buys a new plant. the Pant i assume represent the Military doctrine of enlisted men bending to an officer class that has been placed in charge of their very lives, that controls them in every way, the way they dress, when they sleep, when they wake, if they get liberty, if they have to stay on the ship. Mister Roberts has the intelligence to decipher this, he throws the plant into the Ocean to show human beings, even those drafted into the army, an army that separates enlisted men from officers with a rigid code -are not potted plants, humans need more than Sun and Water to survive, they need a purpose and a sense of self worth to motivate them, they need stimulation to survive.

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Nice, I like it. The palm tree could also represent the Captain's hatred and envy of all those who looked down on him in his younger days. The Captain hates those people who treated him badly and he nurtures that hatred like he nurtures that palm tree. The Captain is also green with envy and he seeks advancement to show that he is as good as the people who hurt him. The hatred and envy result in the Captain's terrible treatment of his crew. Roberts and Pulver end up disposing of the symbol of the Captain's shortcomings. The Captain should have been the one to throw the palm tree overboard, but like most of us the Captain finds other people's shortcomings a lot easier to see and react to.

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The Captain should have been the one to throw the palm tree overboard


Come again? That makes no sense whatsoever. If the captain had thrown it overboard the entire point of what the tree represents, and of the Captain's narcissism and vindictive nature, would have been lost. The Captain was blind to his deficiencies and not one given to introspection. That's one of the critical aspects of the story.

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An interesting metaphor about the palm tree. It's also the symbol of the Captain's ambition and self-absorption, his narcissistic concern for himself and his career even at the expense of his own men. This is why he is a terrible officer. The fact that he replaced the tree he had been presented with with another one they just dug up shows that it isn't the tree as such but its meaning in his warped vision of himself that matters. It's not "the" palm tree, it's any palm tree. What matters to him is that there is something tangible there, visible to all, a meaningless symbol of his authority, not the fact that it's not the tree actually presented to him, which is the only one that could have any true significance -- the only one that would have any true significance to a balanced individual proud of an achievement but comfortable in his command and in himself.

Two corrections:

The Captain doesn't buy a new plant. He sent a couple of crewmen out to dig it up. This also reflects his misplaced priorities and attitude toward the crew as his personal lackeys.

And, to state the obvious, this is the Navy, not the Army, as you twice said:

Mister Roberts has the intelligence to decipher this, he throws the plant into the Ocean to show human beings, even those drafted into the army, an army that separates enlisted men from officers with a rigid code -are not potted plants


It didn't required any intelligence to "decipher" what the plant represented -- it was obvious to all the men, which is why they all loathed it. Roberts simply did what none of them could do -- throw it overboard. But there was nothing to "decipher" or anything difficult to understand.

However, the conservationist in me decries the notion that Roberts and later Pulver took out their anger at the Captain by killing an innocent tree. I always hated this aspect -- the tree wasn't to blame for anything; it was a living entity that should have been left alone, and another way found of tormenting the Captain. I understand its being destroyed as a dramatic effect for the play but it's still annoying to me.

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