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Leaving The House Analysis

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Leaving The House Analysis
The only thing that seems to stop the boy from leaving is their father not knowing what he will say and how he will react to the ideas of them leaving the farmhouse for California. During one of their talks, Eben has drawn up a plan of his own on how he will be able to get the farmhouse. Before Eben’s mother had passed she left him money, so that he would be well taken care of after her death. He plans on taking the money and give it to his brothers, so they can go off to California. Making it fewer competitor on who will get the farmhouse. Plotting a plan on your brothers is not only wrong but is disgusting, just to get does not make it right. The family should be a bond that helps us get want we want not to go out the ways to break up the …show more content…
Cabot realizing that he is getting old and needed someone to take care of the farmhouse when he’s gone. Cabot seems to be trying to make a connection with Eben, he knows that he has failed as a father and is trying to come together and make amen with him so he knows that the farm would be taken care of after he is gone. Which add a shape turn the connection in the argument of who gets the farmhouse, making it a good thing nut Abbie selfish self-seen it and is plotting to make it all here’s. Abbie knows that he needs a son to inherit the farmhouse so that he would be able to take care and look after the farmhouse and the animals. As stated in the play here when Cabot, “That hasn't me. A son is me--my blood--mine. Mine ought t' git mine. An' then it's still mine--even though I am six foot under. D'ye see?... I'm gittin' old—ripe on the bough. Not but what I hain't a hard nut t' crack even yet--an' fur many a year t' come! By the Etarnal, I kin break most o' the young fellers's backs at any kind o' work any day o' the year!” Abbie then replies, “Mebbe the Lord'll give us a son.” To then Cabot then Say, “Ye mean--a son--t' me 'n' yew?” With, the thought of how far Abbie is planning to go to get the farm is reaching a breaking point in the argument of family …show more content…
Toward the end of the play Eben begins to unconscious fall into Abbie design trap, as stated in the play, “ABBIE- Vengeance o' God on the hull o' us! What d'we give a durn? I love ye, Eben! God knows I love ye!.” Then conceiving the child, she so wants and needs, for her plan to work. Eben ever-growing love for Abbie making everything seems to go into her favor. Cabot also being so stubborn and is happy about a love child that is not his, prevents him from seeing what has been going on between Abbie and Eben. With everything thing and everyone plans to come into the light, the family trust is broken, rip apart, and destroy when Abbie kills her golden ticket Ebon son. Everyone is to balm for the tragedy of the infant's death. Cabot, for He, is a harsh, stubbornly man who brings the farm over him to the point that he does not care to see how bad it was breaking his family. Abbie and Eben are at balm with what happens to the baby Eben obsessed with revenge and getting what he believes, bang bladed by lust, but it was his careless words that pushed Abbie. She commits the dreadful act, and he cannot see how his word was not helping her at the time, and how it had everything to did with it. Which made no one at the end win everyone one lost, Cabot not having someone to tend to the farm, Abbie and Eben both going to jail, and the Baby for not

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