What the narrator says about her makes her sound very stern and selfish. She sometimes tells a little too much to people about how the town became to be. This makes me think that she is selfish by telling people these things. For example, “Miss Strangeworth would frown a little and sound stern- ‘but it should have been a statue of my grandfather. There wouldn’t have been a town here at all if it hadn’t been for my grandfather and the lumber mill.” She sounded very stern and selfish towards the people and visitors of the town. She thought the statue should have been of her grandfather. In addition, “Miss Strangeworth never gave out any of her roses, although the tourist often asked her.” This quote shows that she is selfish because she doesn’t want to give her roses away. People in the story might as well think she is selfish because she wouldn’t give people her roses. From this evidence, the author says she is stern, and the reader can tell she is…
I believe mrs strangeworth's behavior is not good at all and she needs to work on how she says stuff and not to be up in everyone's business. Since…
Hannah Webster Foster could portray Eliza Wharton fall from society in very specific detail and cautiousness. Foster could be persuasive in warning future generations of defying societal norms. She discussed the emotional influence, the consequences, and the impact of trying to be independent from society’s demands. She warns of the fall within society for not adhering to societal norms. Trying to become independent from society’s expectations can cause disgrace, despair, depression, and devastation in a person’s life.…
She is portrayed as an old lady who has too much pride and wants to be in the know of every tiny piece of gossip in town. In the beginning of the story, it gives the readers the impression that she was a sweet old lady who takes much pride in her rose bush and enjoys the town gossip too much. Ms. Strangeworth comes off as prideful, intrusive and blunt. Ms. Strangeworth was portrayed as prideful throughout the story when she took so much pride in her rose bush which had been passed down to her by her family. She explained to everyone, including tourists who just pass through the town about how she inherited this magnificent rose bush and the first house ever built on Pleasant Street by her grandfather. She believed that she deserved much appreciation, honor and gratitude from the people of the small town because of her grandfather. Her when the town decided to put up a statue of Ethan Allen instead of her grandfather, she was disappointed and muttered “ but it should have been a statue of my grandfather. There wouldn’t be a town here at all if it hadn’t been for my grandfather and the lumber mill.” This shows the readers that she believed that the town was her’s and no one else’s. In the text, it claims that Ms. Strangeworth would not give out or share her flowers with anyone else because she believed that the roses belonged within her household. “.. it bothered Ms. Strangeworth to think of people wanting to carry them away, to take them into strange towns, and down strange streets.” Even when people requested for her beautiful roses for the town’s church, she would refuse. “When the new minister came, and the ladies were gathering flowers to decorate the church, Miss Strangeworth sent over a great basket of gladioli.” This tells us that she is very protective of her roses and would not even spare a…
One such example is when the attorney general Henderson tells Mrs. Peters that because she is married to the sheriff, she is married to the law and therefore is a reliable follower of the law. Mrs. Peters' response "Not--just that way," is very interesting in that it suggests that over the course of the play, she has found a different aspect of her identity, perhaps and an empowered woman and not just a housewife. Another interesting quote from Glaspell’s play is when Mrs. Hale states that women "all go through the same things--it's all just a different kind of the same thing." While Minnie Wright’s dealt with her particular situation differently than either Mrs. Peters or Mrs. Hale, they all seem to reject male dominancy to some degree. This concept of female identity and solidarity has a huge impact on the outcome of the play, as Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters decide, despite breaking the law, to conceal the evidence they uncovered that could be used to convict Mrs. Wright for the murder of her…
Stockett shows the sacrifices one makes if it means living according to one’s beliefs through the isolation and loneliness Skeeter endures because of the book. When Skeeter tries to reach out to Elizabeth after being alienated from any and all social events in Jackson, Elizabeth is short with her and rushes her out, when Skeeter realizes; “How could I be so dumb? It’s Wednesday, twelve o’clock. My old bridge club” (409). Skeeter used to be a member of this bridge club, but after her fall from Hilly’s good graces, she was cast out. Although she doesn’t let on that it bothers her, being excluded from her former group of friends clearly hurts her. She shared…
The theme of vanity is explored through Widow Wycherly she is desperate for a drink. She wanted…
Strangeworth suffers for her bad intentions towards Mr. Crane and others people in the town. “…
Firstly, both Jane Eyre and Bertha Mason are perceived by Victorian society similarly – they are both unwanted, unnoticed and unfitting to their surroundings, with Bertha being locked away as a result of her supposed craziness and Jane finding herself in a constant battle of unacceptance, something that becomes apparent Jane’s proclaim ‘I was a discord at Gateshead Hall; I was like nobody there.” (Brontë, 23) This highlights Jane’s unescapable oppression,…
Mystery within the plot lingers even before the Governess arrives. Miss Jessel, the Governess’ predecessor, had died with the cause of death unknown. None of the residents in the house speak of her other than say how she is missed dearly or how beautiful she was. Her…
Ms. Strangeworth has lost many friends in her life without realizing why. She looks down on her old friend that dropped out of school. The readers can tell that she is a woman of upstanding she believes everyone loves her. The audience will also spot how observant…
As she spends eight years at Lowood, she learns many things. Although at first, things didn’t work out. During her first couple of months there, it was hard for her to fit in. For one, Mr. Brocklehurst embarrassed her in front of all the girls. When a girl is put on top of a pedestal, and someone of high importance is speaking down upon them, of course they would be embarrassed. At Lowood, she learned that they were to be kept plain and…
Throughout much of her childhood, Jane lives with the Reed’s at Gateshead-hall. Her aunt and cousins are tremendously heartless towards her, calling her a burden, and a liar. Jane sleeps in a closet, eats meals alone, and is forbidden to associate with her cousins; she is always excluded. Although Mrs. Reed is asked to care for Jane like her own child by her deceased husband before his death, she fails to do so. In fact, she does…
In addition, Sarah Good, a social pariah in the small village of Salem, well-known for her eccentric behavior, was also accused of being a witch on the claims from neighbors that the family had stayed with during hard times, that when the Goods’ had left, their livestock would sicken to the point of death. They chalked this up to Good bewitching their livestock, but these weren’t the only claims brought against her. A number of families also claimed that she could make objects disappear into thin air. When questioned on this topic, Good came across as tight-lipped and aggressive in her answers to the villagers and her fellow Puritans, further imbedding the already present belief that Good herself was a witch and resulted in her arrest, alongside…
As the governess at Thornfield Hall, the position of Jane’s social class could be seen as rather ambiguous in the…