The story of
Blight centres on the character of Stanislaus Tully, a
Dublin labourer who has been injured on the job and is hoping to receive damages from the courts. He has greatly overexaggerated the extent of his injuries to reap the largest monetary award possible, and is living with his sister while he "convalesces." His pregnant sister, Mrs. Foley, has two children: Jimmy, a
cripple, and Lily, a prostitute. Her husband is away fighting in the
British Army. The first two acts are devoted to their squalid living conditions and the well-meaning but misguided attempts of a charity worker to alleviate their situation with platitudes. At the end of the second act, it is revealed that Tully has won his court case and come into a small fortune. He immediately abandons his rabble-rousing reformist stance and decides to buy property in the slums. The third act takes place in the Townsend Thanatorium Boardroom and opens with a comic discussion between two medical students, Medical Dick and Medical Davy, and a charwoman; during the course of their dialogue, it is revealed that Lily Foley has contracted
syphilis. The Board is engaged in a plan to build a shamrock-shaped mortuary chapel for
Protestants, Catholics, and
Nonconformists, which is criticised as useless and frivolous by Dr. Tumulty, a cynical, practical-minded doctor. Tully, now a member of the
Dublin Corporation, arrives to broker the sale of some tenement property as a site for the project. The meeting is disrupted by Tully's brother-in-law, Foley, who has returned from the war to find that he has been evicted from his
tenement and that his wife, son, and newborn child have all perished in his absence. The Board responds with meaningless words of sympathy but apparently does not feel any culpability, and Dr. Tumulty is left to state the moral of the play: "All your benevolent formulism only makes the position more and more hopeless. The less you spend on prevention the more you will pay for cure. Until the citizens of this city realize that their children should be brought up in the most beautiful and favorable surroundings the city can afford, and not in the most squalid, until this floundering Moloch of a Government realize that they must spend more money on education than on police, this city will continue to be the breeding-ground of disease, vice, hypocrisy and discontent. I leave you to erect your tripartite edifice over the children of the city of blight."
Gogarty critics have noted that the over-prominence of Tumulty (who is essentially a mouthpiece for
Gogarty and not a character in his own right) in Act III constitutes a "structural flaw". However, while acknowledging that the
polemic play "suffers from the limitations of its kind",
Gogarty's skilful use of comic dialogue and irony have been praised. ==Reception and influence==