Song Meaning
The scene opens with a jarring confrontation, Colin's immediate, fearful reaction to Mary's presence in his room. His panicked "Get out!" and question, "Are you a ghost?" immediately establish a tone of isolation and perhaps a fragile mental state, suggesting he's unaccustomed to visitors or perhaps even reality itself. Mary's calm, factual introduction, "I am Mary Lennox," and her claim of relation to Archibald Craven, serve as a stark contrast to Colin's distress, grounding the scene in a familial connection that seems foreign to Colin.
Colin's subsequent pronouncements reveal a deep-seated despair and self-imposed exile. He declares, "I see no one and no one sees me, including my father," articulating a profound sense of invisibility and abandonment. The certainty of his impending death, based on overheard whispers, highlights his vulnerability and the oppressive atmosphere of the household. This fatalistic outlook is further cemented by his belief that even if he were to live, he'd be a "hunchback," linking physical deformity with inevitable demise.
The exchange about their mothers and fathers introduces a shared thread of loss and parental absence, though interpreted differently. Colin attributes his father's supposed hatred to his mother's death during his birth, a heavy burden of guilt. Mary's mention of her parents dying in India and her father hating "the garden" introduces a new, mysterious element, hinting at shared secrets or traumas within the Craven family. The dialogue circles back to the oppressive nature of the house, with Mary admitting, "I have bad dreams in this house," suggesting a pervasive sense of unease that transcends Colin's personal suffering.