Laminex and Mirrors

by

Cate Kennedy

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Mr. Moreton Character Analysis

– Mr. Moreton is an “old bloke, ex-Army” who is a patient at the hospital where the narrator works. Though he often jokes and laughs with the narrator, he appears melancholy in the environment of his hospital room. He rarely sleeps, hates his stifling oxygen mask, and appears to have lost his appetite for hospital food. Mr. Moreton is dying of lung cancer, but continues to ask the narrator to sneak him cigarettes on a daily basis, a request which she denies for fear of being fired. Eventually, Mr. Moreton informs the narrator that he has been given a matter of weeks to live, and that his daughter and grandchildren are planning to visit him now that they know he is close to death. During the climax of the short story, the narrator decides to sneak Mr. Moreton out of his hospital room and take him to the abandoned bathroom in the “Menzies wing” for a private bath. Seeing the way in which this small gesture transforms Mr. Moreton, making him appear younger, happier, and “like anyone’s grandpa,” the narrator takes him outside and finally gives him a cigarette. When the two get locked outside, Mr. Moreton worries that the narrator will lose her job because of him, but she tells him not to worry. As he hums “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary,” Mr. Moreton readies himself to enter the hospital, laughing, coughing, and then laughing again as he approaches the doors with the narrator.

Mr. Moreton Quotes in Laminex and Mirrors

The Laminex and Mirrors quotes below are all either spoken by Mr. Moreton or refer to Mr. Moreton. 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:
Joy and Drudgery Theme Icon
).
Laminex and Mirrors Quotes

“Matron's got to you, has she?”

“Sorry, but yes.”

“Dunno what's gunna kill me first,” he mutters. I give his breakfast tray an ineffectual rub. He hasn't touched his poached egg, and I can't blame him—it's sitting there like the eye of a giant squid. Mr. Moreton has an oxygen mask, but tells me he hates using it. “Feel like that thing's choking me,” he says. “Like in the war.”

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton (speaker), The Matron
Page Number: 36-37
Explanation and Analysis:

“I know you're a friendly girl,” says one of the nurses in low, embarrassed tones when she stops me in the corridor a few minutes later, “but it's best not to fraternise too much with the patients. If you're a cleaner, I mean.”

“Right,” I say. “Sorry.”

“Just do your work.”

“Sorry, I will.”

I trudge, my face burning, down towards the corridor of elective surgeries. It's OK, I tell myself. At the end of the summer holidays I will have saved enough for three months in Europe, where I will walk the streets of Paris and London, absorbing culture and life and fraternising with whoever I like.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 37-38
Explanation and Analysis:

“These things happen,” he says. He surveys his empty hands bleakly. “I marched, last Anzac Day,” he adds. “Hard to believe, isn't it?” He looks morosely out through the sealed window to the courtyard garden, where the five iceberg rosebushes struggle to survive their pruning.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 43
Explanation and Analysis:

I'm remembering my directive about fraternising, but I hate standing here beside his bed, like some official. I sit down and peel off my glove, pick up his hand. It's like a bundle of twigs. That hand, I tell myself, held a rifle, tried to stop itself trembling with terror, worked all its life.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 44
Explanation and Analysis:

“Do you know,” he says, “I haven't had a bath in I don't know how long. Used to having to sit on a plastic chair in the shower. Or stand there clutching those bloody grab rails. Haven't been like this for years.”

“Like what?” I say. My heart is jumping into the back of my throat.

“Weightless,” he says finally. “Completely weightless.”

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton (speaker)
Page Number: 51
Explanation and Analysis:

As I put away his shaver in his toilet bag I see an unopened bottle of aftershave with a sticker saying Happy Christmas, Grandad! still on the box. I raise my eyebrows enquiringly.

“Why not,” he says when he sees me holding it up. “Pass it over here!”

It's the recklessness in his voice that decides me. I help him change his pyjama top for the shirt and sweater he has hanging in his cupboard, and I hold out my hand to help him into his wheelchair again.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 51
Explanation and Analysis:

“You look very nice,” I say.

“Do I? I feel bloody great,” he says, stretching with a contented yawn, and there's a little zephyr of morning breeze that washes over us, warm and fragrant with the faint scent of blossom, and I'm about to speak again when the propped-open door slides slowly shut behind us on its hinges. There is a terrible echoing click as it closes on its own deadlock, and I recognise the sound as soon as I hear it. It is the sound of a plane door closing without me, ready to taxi down a runway and take off for London.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton (speaker)
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:

Down in the kitchen the other cleaners will be pouring their cups of tea out of the urn now, Marie remarking coolly on my absence, and Matron will be waiting for us, I am certain, at the nurses' station, in the no-man's-land of the hospital's thermostatically cool interior, its sterilised world of hard surfaces, wiped clean and blameless. Someone else's jurisdiction now.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton, Dot, The Matron, Marie, Noeleen
Page Number: 55
Explanation and Analysis:
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Laminex and Mirrors PDF

Mr. Moreton Quotes in Laminex and Mirrors

The Laminex and Mirrors quotes below are all either spoken by Mr. Moreton or refer to Mr. Moreton. 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:
Joy and Drudgery Theme Icon
).
Laminex and Mirrors Quotes

“Matron's got to you, has she?”

“Sorry, but yes.”

“Dunno what's gunna kill me first,” he mutters. I give his breakfast tray an ineffectual rub. He hasn't touched his poached egg, and I can't blame him—it's sitting there like the eye of a giant squid. Mr. Moreton has an oxygen mask, but tells me he hates using it. “Feel like that thing's choking me,” he says. “Like in the war.”

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton (speaker), The Matron
Page Number: 36-37
Explanation and Analysis:

“I know you're a friendly girl,” says one of the nurses in low, embarrassed tones when she stops me in the corridor a few minutes later, “but it's best not to fraternise too much with the patients. If you're a cleaner, I mean.”

“Right,” I say. “Sorry.”

“Just do your work.”

“Sorry, I will.”

I trudge, my face burning, down towards the corridor of elective surgeries. It's OK, I tell myself. At the end of the summer holidays I will have saved enough for three months in Europe, where I will walk the streets of Paris and London, absorbing culture and life and fraternising with whoever I like.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 37-38
Explanation and Analysis:

“These things happen,” he says. He surveys his empty hands bleakly. “I marched, last Anzac Day,” he adds. “Hard to believe, isn't it?” He looks morosely out through the sealed window to the courtyard garden, where the five iceberg rosebushes struggle to survive their pruning.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 43
Explanation and Analysis:

I'm remembering my directive about fraternising, but I hate standing here beside his bed, like some official. I sit down and peel off my glove, pick up his hand. It's like a bundle of twigs. That hand, I tell myself, held a rifle, tried to stop itself trembling with terror, worked all its life.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 44
Explanation and Analysis:

“Do you know,” he says, “I haven't had a bath in I don't know how long. Used to having to sit on a plastic chair in the shower. Or stand there clutching those bloody grab rails. Haven't been like this for years.”

“Like what?” I say. My heart is jumping into the back of my throat.

“Weightless,” he says finally. “Completely weightless.”

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton (speaker)
Page Number: 51
Explanation and Analysis:

As I put away his shaver in his toilet bag I see an unopened bottle of aftershave with a sticker saying Happy Christmas, Grandad! still on the box. I raise my eyebrows enquiringly.

“Why not,” he says when he sees me holding it up. “Pass it over here!”

It's the recklessness in his voice that decides me. I help him change his pyjama top for the shirt and sweater he has hanging in his cupboard, and I hold out my hand to help him into his wheelchair again.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton
Page Number: 51
Explanation and Analysis:

“You look very nice,” I say.

“Do I? I feel bloody great,” he says, stretching with a contented yawn, and there's a little zephyr of morning breeze that washes over us, warm and fragrant with the faint scent of blossom, and I'm about to speak again when the propped-open door slides slowly shut behind us on its hinges. There is a terrible echoing click as it closes on its own deadlock, and I recognise the sound as soon as I hear it. It is the sound of a plane door closing without me, ready to taxi down a runway and take off for London.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton (speaker)
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:

Down in the kitchen the other cleaners will be pouring their cups of tea out of the urn now, Marie remarking coolly on my absence, and Matron will be waiting for us, I am certain, at the nurses' station, in the no-man's-land of the hospital's thermostatically cool interior, its sterilised world of hard surfaces, wiped clean and blameless. Someone else's jurisdiction now.

Related Characters: Narrator (speaker), Mr. Moreton, Dot, The Matron, Marie, Noeleen
Page Number: 55
Explanation and Analysis: