The story is really humorous and funny. Jerome’s episode of packing, Harris’s and George’s way of packing and Montmorency’s contribution have made the story funny and interesting. Jerome was confused about his toothbrush and found it in a boot. He also packed his spectacles in the bag. The incident of butter makes the reader laugh. George treads on the butter and it sticks to his slipper. Later he puts it on the chair. Harris sits on the chair and it sticks to his bottom. They squash the tomatoes by putting the strawberry jam on them.
Montmorency’s pretention for the lemons to be rats is also fascinating and funny.
These incidents are described in an orderly and perfect way.
Thinking about language
(Page 90)
Overview: Packing
The narrator, Harris, and George need to pack for a trip. The narrator volunteers, priding himself on his packing skill, but ends up forgetting boots, sitting on butter, and repeatedly unpacking and repacking. When Harris and George take over the food hampers, they create even worse chaos: squashing tomatoes, breaking cups, stepping on butter. The dog Montmorency adds to the mess by sitting on things and putting his leg in the jam. The story is a masterclass in comic writing through irony, exaggeration, and characterisation.
Key Points
- Narrator proudly claims to be an expert packer
- He forgets boots, has to reopen the bag multiple times
- Sits on the bag to close it; forgets his toothbrush
- Harris and George are even worse — break cups, squash tomatoes
- George steps on butter; Harris packs jam on top of tomatoes
- Montmorency (the dog) sits on things, puts paw in jam
- The narrator mocks his friends but is equally incompetent
- Key devices: irony, hyperbole, understatement, comic timing
- Theme: human incompetence, laziness, blame-shifting
- From "Three Men in a Boat" by Jerome K. Jerome
Frequently Asked Questions
How does Jerome create humour in "Packing"?
What is the role of Montmorency?
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