By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Identify the text as a PLAY (specifically a radio play) — NOT a short story or prose essay
  • 2Describe the two characters: Mr. Lamb (elderly man with tin leg, open philosophy of life) and Derry (14-year-old, acid-burned face, bitter and withdrawn)
  • 3Trace the arc of their encounter: Derry's initial hostility → gradual opening → transformation → decision to return
  • 4Explain the dramatic irony: Derry resolves to return to Lamb and embrace life; when he arrives, Mr. Lamb has died falling from the ladder
  • 5Analyse the themes: disability and social isolation, prejudice vs acceptance, the healing power of human connection, Mr. Lamb's philosophy of openness to life
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Why this chapter matters
On the Face of It is the only play in the CBSE Class 12 Vistas syllabus — and its genre (radio play) is itself a common MCQ trap. The chapter's themes of disability, social prejudice, and the healing power of human connection generate consistent long-answer questions. The dramatic irony of its ending — Lamb dies just as Derry decides to live fully — is the most-tested single moment in the chapter.

On the Face of It — Susan Hill

"It's not what you look like. It's what you ARE inside."

1. About the Play

'On the Face of It' is a ONE-ACT PLAY by Susan Hill (British writer, b. 1942). DERRY, a 14-year-old boy, has one side of his face BURNT and SCARRED by acid. He hides from the world — scaling fences into gardens where he thinks no one will see him. One garden belongs to MR. LAMB, an old man with a TIN LEG, who lives ALONE with his doors and windows OPEN. Their encounter lasts one afternoon — and changes BOTH their lives.


2. Characters

Derry (14)

  • His face: SCARRED by acid. 'The ugliest thing you ever saw.'
  • HIDES from people. HATES being stared at. Has INTERNALISED the world's revulsion.
  • 'I look like a monster.' 'People are afraid of me.'
  • Through Mr. Lamb: begins to see that BEAUTY IS NOT JUST APPEARANCE. 'You can get on better than you think.'

Mr. Lamb (The Old Man)

  • Lost a LEG in the war. Has a TIN LEG. Lives alone.
  • His philosophy: KEEP THE GATES OPEN. 'I keep my windows open. I keep my doors open. I never close them.'
  • He doesn't care what Derry looks like. He cares what Derry THINKS and SAYS.
  • He has BEES. He makes JAM. He watches the world. 'There's nothing that God made that doesn't interest me.'
  • Tragic end: falls from a ladder while picking crab apples. Derry returns — to find Mr. Lamb DEAD. But the lesson Mr. Lamb taught him is ALIVE.

3. Themes

1. Appearance vs Reality

'On the face of it' — the TITLE — means: at FIRST GLANCE. But first glances are DECEPTIVE. Derry's face is scarred — but he is a sensitive, intelligent, lonely boy. Mr. Lamb has a tin leg — but he is the MOST ALIVE character in the play. The play is a SUSTAINED ARGUMENT against judging by appearance.

2. Disability and Social Stigma

Derry's REAL wound is not the acid. It is the WORLD'S REACTION — the stares, the fear, the avoidance. Mr. Lamb's REAL disability is not the tin leg. It is the world's assumption that he is 'less than whole.' The play asks: WHO IS MORE DISABLED? The boy with the scarred face — or the society that can't see past it?

3. Isolation and Connection

Derry ISOLATES himself. Mr. Lamb OPENS himself — literally (doors and windows open) and metaphorically (talks to everyone, interested in everything). The play is about Derry's JOURNEY from isolation toward connection — a journey Mr. Lamb ENABLES.

4. Life and Death

Mr. Lamb DIES at the end. But Derry LIVES — and RETURNS. The ending: Derry finds Mr. Lamb dead. He doesn't run away. He STAYS. He will help. He has CHANGED. Mr. Lamb's PHYSICAL death is not the TRAGEDY of the play. Derry's EMOTIONAL rebirth IS the play's TRIUMPH.


4. Key Lines

  • "I'm not afraid of people's looks. I'm afraid of what they're thinking."
  • "You can get on better than you think."
  • "I keep my windows open. I keep my doors open."
  • "It's not what you look like. It's what you ARE inside."

5. Conclusion

'On the Face of It' is a play about TWO PEOPLE at the MARGINS — and about the CONVERSATION that brings one of them back to life:

  • DERRY: The boy who hid his scarred face from the world — and found a man who didn't care about scars
  • MR. LAMB: 'I keep my doors open.' The old man with a tin leg who lived FULLY
  • THE ENDING: Mr. Lamb dies. Derry returns. And STAYS. He has learned: the world is bigger than your scars.

'On the face of it' — Derry is ugly. On the face of it — Mr. Lamb is disabled. But the play teaches: there is ALWAYS more than what's 'on the face of it.'

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Author: Susan Hill
British novelist and playwright, born 1942 in Scarborough, England. Known for novels ('The Woman in Black' 1983, 'I'm the King of the Castle' 1970, 'Strange Meeting' 1971) and for radio plays. 'On the Face of It' was written as a RADIO PLAY — originally performed on BBC Radio. CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) for services to literature.
MCQs ask: nationality (British), that this is a RADIO PLAY (not a short story or prose piece), and that she is known for 'The Woman in Black'. The genre identification (radio play) is the most common MCQ trap for this chapter.
The Two Characters
MR. LAMB: An elderly man who lives alone in a large house with a garden full of weeds, crab apple trees, and bee hives. He has a TIN LEG (prosthetic leg, having lost his real leg). He is warm, philosophical, and openly engaged with the world: 'I like everything that lives and grows. I like weeds.' He reads books, listens to the world, and refuses to feel sorry for himself or anyone else. DERRY: A 14-year-old boy who has had one half of his face burned by acid. He is bitter, withdrawn, and convinced that the world sees only his disfigurement. He climbs over Lamb's wall expecting to find an empty garden — and instead finds Mr. Lamb.
Both characters have physical 'imperfections' — Lamb's tin leg and Derry's burned face. This parallel is intentional: both have been marked by the world, but their responses to being marked are opposite. Lamb accepts and opens; Derry withdraws and closes. The play is about Lamb gradually drawing Derry toward Lamb's way of being.
Mr. Lamb's Philosophy
'I like weeds. Some people say they are ugly. But weeds have their place, just like everything else.' Mr. Lamb refuses to divide the world into beautiful and ugly, worthy and unworthy. He leaves his gate open ('I have no curtains either. I am open to everything'). He reads books, listens to bees, makes crab apple jelly. He says to Derry: 'There's nothing wrong with your face. It is a face. Just a face. All the rest is inside you.' His philosophy: what matters is what you think and feel inside — not how you appear.
Key quote for the exam: 'There's nothing wrong with your face. It is a face.' This is Lamb's entire philosophy in miniature: refusing to see Derry's burned face as a deficiency, insisting on his essential humanity. Contrast with almost every other person Derry encounters, who stares or turns away.
Derry's Bitterness — And His Change
Derry has internalised the world's rejection: 'People stare. Or they don't look at all because they don't want to.' He overhears his own mother say she cannot bear to kiss him. A woman whispers 'that poor boy, that terrible thing' — her pity feels as bad as rejection. Derry believes he is permanently marked and permanently limited. BUT: his encounter with Lamb begins to shift this. Lamb's refusal to pity him or recoil from him — his straightforward, curious engagement — is something Derry has never experienced. By the end, Derry has decided: 'I'm going back to him. Because he's the only person who ever... just... talked to me.'
Derry's arc is the play's emotional core. He moves from: suspicion → defensiveness → grudging interest → genuine connection → transformation. The transformation happens NOT because Lamb solves anything but because Lamb SEES him as a whole person.
The Dramatic Irony — The Ending
Derry goes home. His mother tries to stop him from returning to Mr. Lamb, calling him a 'funny old man.' But Derry insists: 'I am going back.' He runs back to Lamb's garden. When he arrives, Mr. Lamb has fallen from the ladder while picking crab apples. He is dead. Derry calls out to him — but it is Derry himself who says, for the first time: 'I'm not afraid.' The play ends with Derry weeping but transformed — he has found, through Lamb, a way to live despite loss.
DRAMATIC IRONY: The audience knows (or senses) from the moment Lamb climbs the ladder alone that something will go wrong. Derry doesn't know. He arrives changed and ready to embrace life — only to find the man who changed him is gone. This is not a tragic ending but a complex one: Lamb's gift to Derry survives Lamb's death. The lesson took.
The Title — 'On the Face of It'
'On the face of it' is an English idiom meaning: at first sight; apparently; judging only by the surface. The title is a PUN: literally, the play is about Derry's face (the surface level); idiomatically, the title warns us NOT to judge by surfaces — which is exactly what the world does to Derry, and what Mr. Lamb refuses to do.
The title pun is a reliable exam question. Both meanings must be explained: (1) literal: the play concerns a facial disfigurement; (2) idiomatic: 'on the face of it' = judging by appearance — which is what the play argues against.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Writing that 'On the Face of It' is a short story or a chapter of prose fiction
'On the Face of It' is a RADIO PLAY — written specifically for radio performance. It has stage directions, dialogue between characters, and dramatic structure. It is NOT a prose essay or short story. This is one of the most common mistakes in this chapter, and MCQs directly test the genre.
WATCH OUT
Saying Mr. Lamb's injury is a 'burn' or that Derry's injury is a 'tin leg'
MR. LAMB has a TIN LEG (prosthetic leg — he lost his real leg). DERRY has a HALF-BURNED FACE (acid burned one side of his face). These are NOT interchangeable. MCQs test which character has which disability.
WATCH OUT
Writing that the play ends happily because Derry is transformed
The ending is IRONIC and bittersweet. Derry IS transformed — he returns to Lamb ready to embrace life. But when he arrives, MR. LAMB IS DEAD (fallen from the ladder). The transformation is real; the price is Lamb's death. Calling it a 'happy ending' is wrong — calling it a 'hopeful ending despite loss' is accurate.
WATCH OUT
Missing the significance of Derry's mother's role
Derry's mother is not simply a worried parent. She represents the WELL-MEANING but HARMFUL response to disability: she overprotects Derry, refuses to let him engage with the world, and tells him to avoid 'funny old men' like Lamb. Her protectiveness, like Lamb's openness, is a commentary on how non-disabled people relate to disability. Her pity (however loving) is exactly what keeps Derry from healing — whereas Lamb's refusal to pity him enables the transformation.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· mr-lambs-philosophy
What is Mr. Lamb's attitude toward life? How is it different from Derry's at the start of the play?
Show solution
MR. LAMB'S ATTITUDE: Mr. Lamb is radically open to life in all its forms. He welcomes weeds in his garden ('they grow and are green'), leaves his gate open, keeps no curtains, reads books, listens to bees, and makes crab apple jelly. He refuses to pity himself for his tin leg or to see his physical limitation as defining. His philosophy: 'It's what you think that counts, what's inside you.' He engages with the world without fear or resentment. DERRY'S ATTITUDE AT THE START: Derry is the opposite — closed, bitter, and convinced that the world sees only his burned face. He expects to be stared at, pitied, or avoided. He is angry at people who pity him and angry at people who recoil from him. He has withdrawn from the world, convinced it has no place for him. THE CONTRAST: Lamb has been marked by loss (his leg) and responded by opening further; Derry has been marked (his face) and responded by closing completely. The play is about Lamb's openness gradually drawing Derry out of his closure.
Q2MEDIUM· dramatic-irony-ending
Explain the dramatic irony of the ending of 'On the Face of It'. What does the ending suggest about the nature of transformation?
Show solution
THE ENDING: Derry leaves Mr. Lamb's garden after their encounter, goes home, and faces his mother's objections. Despite her protests, he insists: 'I am going back to him.' He runs back to Lamb's garden — transformed, ready to engage with life. When he arrives, Mr. Lamb has fallen from the ladder while picking crab apples alone. He is dead. DRAMATIC IRONY: The irony operates on two levels. (1) SITUATIONAL IRONY: Derry reaches the highest point of his transformation — ready to return, ready to live — at the exact moment Lamb is gone. The man who enabled the transformation does not get to see it. (2) TRAGIC IRONY: Lamb's death is caused by his very habits (climbing ladders, doing things alone, not waiting for help) — the same independence and openness that made him such an effective teacher for Derry. WHAT THE ENDING SAYS ABOUT TRANSFORMATION: The ending is not simply tragic — it argues that transformation, once real, survives the loss of its catalyst. Derry says 'I'm not afraid' in the final scene. He weeps, but he does not retreat. Mr. Lamb's gift — the capacity to see himself and the world without fear — has taken root. The lesson did not die with the teacher. This is the play's most hopeful and most mature argument: that genuine human connection creates change that outlasts the connection itself.
Q3HARD· long-answer
What does 'On the Face of It' say about disability, prejudice, and the transformative power of human connection? How do Mr. Lamb and Derry's different responses to physical imperfection illuminate the play's central theme?
Show solution
THE PLAY'S SUBJECT — DISABILITY AS SOCIAL CONDITION: 'On the Face of It' treats disability not primarily as a medical fact but as a SOCIAL EXPERIENCE. Derry's burned face is not the source of his suffering — the world's response to it is. People stare, or deliberately look away. His own mother cannot bear to kiss him. A woman whispers 'that poor boy' — and her pity feels as dehumanising as rejection. Derry has internalised all of this: he believes he is permanently marked, permanently excluded, permanently defined by his face. His disfigurement is not the prison; the world's prejudice is. TWO RESPONSES TO PHYSICAL LOSS: Mr. Lamb and Derry both have visible physical differences — Lamb has a tin leg, Derry a burned face. But their responses are diametrically opposed, and the play uses this contrast as its central argument. LAMB'S RESPONSE: Lamb has made a complete peace with his tin leg. He does not deny it or hide it; he does not explain it or ask for sympathy. He moves on — literally and figuratively. His garden is full of weeds he refuses to pull ('weeds have their place, just like everything else'), his gate is permanently open, his windows have no curtains. He is a man who has decided that being alive and engaged with the world is the proper response to imperfection. His philosophy: 'It's what you think that counts, what's inside you.' This is not false cheerfulness; it is a hard-won wisdom. DERRY'S RESPONSE: Derry has made NO peace. He has withdrawn, pre-rejected the world before it can reject him, and constructed a story in which his burned face means permanent exclusion. His bitterness is understandable — the world has given him ample evidence for it. But the story he has told himself is also a prison. THE ENCOUNTER — HOW LAMB DRAWS DERRY OUT: What Lamb does for Derry is very specific: he does NOT pity him, NOT comfort him with platitudes, NOT pretend the face doesn't exist. He speaks to Derry the way he would speak to anyone — directly, curiously, without lowering his voice or adjusting his manner. 'There's nothing wrong with your face. It is a face. Just a face.' This is radical: in a world where everyone either recoils or over-compensates, Lamb simply SEES Derry. It is this being-seen — not any advice or lesson — that begins to unlock Derry. THE ROLE OF DERRY'S MOTHER: The play also uses Derry's mother to show the LIMITS OF WELL-MEANING PROTECTIVENESS. She loves Derry and tries to keep him safe. But her overprotection and her anxiety about 'funny old men' are another form of not-seeing: she sees Derry as fragile, as someone who must be shielded from the world. Lamb, by contrast, sees him as capable — of conversation, of growth, of making his own choices. The mother's love, however genuine, cannot do what Lamb's respect does. THE DRAMATIC IRONY AND WHAT IT MEANS: Derry decides to return — to embrace Lamb's openness, to stop using his face as a reason to hide. When he arrives, Lamb is dead. The world seems to confirm the bleakest reading: connection is brief, people leave, hope is punished. But Susan Hill refuses this conclusion. Derry does not retreat. He says, in the final line, 'I am not afraid' — and he weeps, but he stays. The transformation Lamb gave him was real, and it survives Lamb's death. THE PLAY'S ARGUMENT: 'On the Face of It' argues that the problem of disability is not in the body but in the imagination — both the disabled person's imagination of exclusion, and the world's imagination of what disability means. Mr. Lamb's lasting gift to Derry is not advice but a different imaginative possibility: that a man with a tin leg can have the most alive and open relationship with the world in the room. Once Derry has seen that possibility, he cannot unsee it.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Author: Susan Hill (born 1942, British); 'On the Face of It' is a RADIO PLAY — NOT a short story; written for BBC Radio
  • Characters: Mr. Lamb (elderly man, TIN LEG, open philosophy, garden with weeds/crab apples/bees, gate always open) and Derry (14-year-old, HALF-FACE BURNED BY ACID, bitter, withdrawn)
  • Mr. Lamb's philosophy: 'I like everything that lives and grows'; 'There's nothing wrong with your face. It is a face.'; weeds have their place; refusal to pity self or others
  • Derry's arc: hostility → grudging interest → genuine connection → decision to return ('I am going back to him, because he's the only person who ever just talked to me')
  • Derry's mother: overprotective, well-meaning, but her pity keeps Derry from healing; contrasted with Lamb's respect for Derry's autonomy
  • Dramatic irony: Derry resolves to return to Lamb → rushes back → arrives to find Lamb has fallen from the ladder and died → Derry says 'I am not afraid' — transformation survives the teacher's death
  • Title: PUNS on 'on the face of it' (idiom: judging by surface appearance) AND literally (the play is about a face); the play argues against judging by surfaces
  • Themes: disability as social experience (not just medical fact), prejudice and pity as equally dehumanising, healing power of genuine human connection, transformation through being seen as a whole person

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-10 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Extract-based MCQ41Comprehension of a key dialogue exchange (typically Lamb's philosophy speech or Derry's bitterness monologue), vocabulary in context, or identification of the genre
Short Answer21Mr. Lamb's philosophy, Derry's transformation, the title's double meaning, the role of Derry's mother, or who has which disability
Long Answer6occasionallyDramatic irony of the ending, what the play says about disability and prejudice, character sketch of Mr. Lamb or Derry, or the theme of transformation through human connection
Prep strategy
  • The GENRE of this text is RADIO PLAY — a direct MCQ target; never call it a short story or essay; also note it was written for BBC Radio
  • Know WHICH CHARACTER has WHICH DISABILITY: Mr. Lamb = TIN LEG; Derry = BURNED FACE (acid); mixing these up is a guaranteed MCQ loss
  • For the ending: use the phrase DRAMATIC IRONY — explain BOTH that Derry is transformed AND that Lamb dies at the moment of return; one-sided answers ('sad ending' or 'happy ending') score half marks

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Disability Rights and Social Model of Disability

The 'social model of disability' (developed by disability rights activists, formalized in the 1970s-80s) argues exactly what Mr. Lamb lives: disability is not primarily a medical problem but a social one — created by environments, attitudes, and systems that exclude people with impairments. Derry's real suffering is not his burned face but the world's response to it. India's Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act (2016) reflects this shift — from charity/welfare toward rights-based inclusion.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. For genre: always write 'radio play' — never 'short story' or 'play for stage'; the radio medium matters because it relies entirely on voice and dialogue, with no visual elements — which is why Mr. Lamb's way of speaking (warm, direct, unhurried) carries all the weight
  2. For the title question: give BOTH meanings — literal (the play concerns a burned face) AND idiomatic ('on the face of it' = judging by surface appearance, which the play argues against); one-meaning answers get 1 out of 2

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Read Susan Hill's 'I'm the King of the Castle' (1970) — her most celebrated novel, about two boys and the cruelty of social exclusion; the same themes of isolation, power, and the psychological damage of being made to feel unwanted run through both texts
  • Research the Social Model of Disability (developed by disability scholars Mike Oliver and Colin Barnes) — it provides the academic framework for exactly what Mr. Lamb demonstrates: that disability is a social and environmental problem, not just a medical one

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 12 Board (English Core)High
CUET (English)Medium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Mr. Lamb's open gate and absence of curtains are physical expressions of his philosophy: he is radically open to the world. He does not shield himself from being seen (no curtains) and does not keep the world out (open gate). This is the opposite of Derry, who has psychologically 'closed the curtains' on the world after the acid burn. The open gate is also what allows Derry to enter — literally and figuratively. Lamb's openness creates the space in which Derry's transformation becomes possible.

Not in the conventional sense. The ending is bittersweet — Mr. Lamb dies, and that is a genuine loss. But Susan Hill's play does not end with Derry retreating or collapsing. He says 'I am not afraid' and weeps, but he has been transformed. The play is closer to a DRAMA OF HOPE than a tragedy: it argues that genuine connection changes people permanently, and that transformation, once real, outlasts the person who enabled it. The ending is painful but not defeated.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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