Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

The chosen vessel

Good Essays
766 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The chosen vessel
The Chosen Vessel
The short story, “The Chosen Vessel”, which is written by Barbara Baynton, deals with topics like superstition and religion, and is showing the deadly consequences of these.
The young woman, which name throughout the story remain unknown, spend most of her time alone with her baby. Her husband works as a shearer and stays most of the time in a shed 15 miles away. She spends her days taking care of the cow and calf. The family lives in a house near a creek and a track run by the front of the house. The woman is a town girl and is not truly familiar with the life in the bush. She is not afraid of the horsemen passing by the house, but she is afraid of the swagmen. She does not like the way, the swagmen look at her, and she often considers joining her husband at the shed. But the husband will hear nothing of it and says, “Needn’t flatter yerself”, “nobody’ud want ter run away with yew”(P 183, 2. Para). Therefore she stays home alone with the baby in the house. At nightfall she especially gets scared. Before the nightfall she does several measures to keeping the baby and herself safe. In the kitchen she puts out a plate of food and next to it, she lays her only valuable item, a brooch that had belonged to the woman’s mother.
While the swagman is lurking around the house the woman keeps praying, “Little baby, don’t wake, don’t cry!”(P 184, 1. Par.) . The woman is very worried that the swagman will harm her baby, if he hears it.
Peter Hennessey is a really religious and superstitious man. He lives with his mother 30 miles outside of the township. It is almost time to vote for the upcoming election, and the priest has as usual recommended a candidate. But this time Peter Hennessey will defy the priest’s recommendation. Peter’s mother worries that Peter will not vote for the priest candidate, and Peter wakes often at night because of the mother’s praying, “Mary, mother of Christ! Save my son!”(P 185, 2. Par.). Peter wants to avoid the confrontation with his mother, so he sneaks out at night, and ride to town to register his vote. When he sees the young woman and baby running towards him, he thinks it is a sign from god. Because of his superstition and religious beliefs, he thinks the woman and baby is the Virgin Mary and Baby Jesus. He believes that his mother’s prayers have been answered, and it is a sign, that he shall vote for the priest’s candidate.
In the short story there are two stories happening (almost) simultaneously. The stories interfere when the woman runs screaming towards the man on the horse, and when Peter Hennessey thinks he sees the Virgin Mary and Baby Jesus. The story is written in a way that keeps the reader unknowing of that fact until the end. This way the author gives the reader an late epiphany of the connection between the stories. This is a way of storytelling1 that draws parallels to movies like “Fight Club” and “The Usual Suspect”, and make the story suitable for being performed as a play.
The title of the short story, “The Chosen Vessel”, can be interpreted in different ways. “The Chosen Vessel” means ‘the chosen one’, but in the religious field ‘vessel’ can be interpreted as a synonym for the word; grail. According to some of the legends, is ‘the Holy Grail’, the grail Jesus drank his wine out of at the last supper. Other legends says that ‘the Holy Grail’ is a descendant of Jesus Christ.
The woman sees Peter Hennessey as a holy object (like the grail from the last supper), and Peter Hennessey sees the woman as a sign from god, making him ‘the chosen one’.
The main themes of the text are religion, superstition and the consequences of these. When Peter Hennessey sees the scared praying woman and baby moving towards him, he does not consider helping them. The only thing on his mind is that god has given him a sign. If he had stopped he could possibly had saved her.
I think the author, Barbara Baynton, is trying to provoke the many religious people in the society. She is trying to remind the Christians that religion isn’t meant to be a way to promote your life. The author is trying to say that Christians should remember that acting the way Peter Hennessey did, will end up harming people.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Stories of survival at sea have captured people’s curiosity and imagination throughout history. The struggles that some seafarers have faced while drifting on the open sea are remarkable. “The Open Boat” by Stephen Crane is the story of four crew members trying to survive on the open sea while in a dinghy after their ship sank. Throughout the story, Crane describes how man and nature react with one another. By his description of their reactions, Crane makes it clear that nature does not care about man’s well being.…

    • 753 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Mama, Mama,” cried the baby while pointing at the woman. He sat down playing with his dead mother’s hair. They looked like they were murdered. A couple hours later the baby fell asleep on his mother. That night Jonathan could not go anywhere because his foot was tied to one of the Hessian’s foot. He quietly untied the rope from his foot, went outside, grabbed the baby and headed towards the tavern. While the baby was sleeping on Jonathan’s shoulder, Jonathan walked through the woods in cold harsh weather. Finally he had reached the tavern.…

    • 449 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    3000 men took 3 years in Belfast to build the RMS Titanic at Hartland and Wolff shipyard.…

    • 131 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Into The Killing Seas

    • 292 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the book Into the killing seas there were two boys that were on the USS Indianapolis as it was sinking was a very exciting book. The book made sense in the it was explained. All the info was true to a point. But over all it was a great book.…

    • 292 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    I’d tumbled off the freight in the jungle by Deptford and found a fire and seven fellows around it, and they had stew – somebody’d got a rabbit and it was in a pail over the fire with some carrots. Ever eat that? It’s awful, but I wanted some, and after a lot of nastiness they said I could have some after they’d had what they wanted of me. My manhood just couldn’t stand it, and I left them. They laughed at me and said I’d be back when I got good and hungry. Then I met this woman, wandering by herself. I knew she was a town woman. Women tramps are very rare; too much sense, I guess. She was clean and looked like an angel to me, but I threatened her and asked her for money. She hadn’t any; then I grabbed her. She wasn’t much afraid and asked what I wanted. I told her in tramp’s language, and I could see she didn’t understand, but when I started to push her down and grab at her clothes she said, ‘Why are you so rough?’ and then I started to cry. She held my head to her breast and talked nicely to me, and I cried worse, but the strange thing is I still wanted her. As if only that would put me right, you see? That’s what I said to her. And do you know what she said? She said ‘You may if you promise not to be rough.’ So I did, and that was when you people came hunting her. When I look back now, it’s a wonder that it wasn’t all over with me that moment. But it wasn’t. No, it was glory come into my life. It was as if I had gone right into Hell…

    • 1024 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    At the beginning of the story, the narrator has been confined to a yellow-room nursery by her husband, with the thought that confinement and isolation would solve her post-partem depression. As the story progresses, she comes to believe that there are women trying to escape the wallpaper. She then realizes that like the women, she needs to escape her confinement and her husband’s grasp. When her husband discovers her, he faints. The narrator then continues to move around the room, and states, “Now why should that man have fainted? But he did, and right across my path by the wall, so that I had to creep over him every time!” (27). Gilman’s tone is notably ironic because her narrator’s reaction to her husband fainting reveals both mockery and madness. The narrator is mocking her husband’s lack of masculinity due to him fainting in front of a girl. As a man, her husband should have taken action and used physical force to restrain his wife. However, he chose to faint at the sight of his wife, demonstrating that he has lost the power to a woman, which at…

    • 1386 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “A Worn Path” by Eudora Welty, an elderly woman faces racism, poverty, and demonstrates an amazing example of perseverance as she takes a long, strenuous journey to help her beloved grandson. Near the end of the Civil War, Phoenix Jackson, an old negro woman, follows a shabby pathway into town to retrieve medications for her young grandchild, who accidently swallowed lye a few years before. During her long, exhausting trip on foot, Jackson encounters and overcomes a plethora of obstacles. Jackson runs directly into a thorn bush and a wild dog causes her to trip and fall into a ditch along the trail. A hunter happens to be passing by and eyes her lying in the ditch. The man helped Jackson up and tried to convince her to go back home by saying, “That’s too far,” and, “You go on home, Granny!” However, Jackson was determined to keep going and told him, “I bound to go to town, Mister.” The hunter mocked Jackson by pointing his gun at her, but she managed to get away from the hunter’s stubborn grasp. Before the hunter leaves, Jackson watches a “flashing nickel fall out of the man’s pocket,” and she picked up “the piece of money with the grace and care.” Jackson finally gets to town and the doctors question the health of her young grandson. She assures the doctors that, “he not dead, he just the same.” The nurse gave Jackson a small bottle of medicine and she “carefully put it into her pocket.” Jackson remembers the nickel in her pocket and despite the financial struggles she faced, she chose to purchase a “little windmill they sells, made out of paper,” to surprise her grandson when she returned home.…

    • 516 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In Marilynne Robinson’s Lila, Robinson tells the story of a preacher’s wife in Gilead, Iowa. Lila was born into the world an orphan. In a benevolent act of kidnapping, Doll, a migrant worker, saves Lila from her home of neglect. Together they lead a rootless, nomadic life as “a cow and her calf.” At the mercy of the elements, taking work where they could find it, Lila and Doll belonged nowhere and to nobody except for each other. Life had been neither kind nor fair to either of them, but they found peace in one another, and shared a bond so deep that it did not matter when they did not know the words for their emotions. The world was as beautiful, tangible, and true, as it was harsh, rugged, and dangerous. Good people were forced into bad situations,…

    • 1683 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Boat” by Alistair Macleod demonstrates the importance of embracing change in today’s ever changing society. In this short story, Alistair MacLeod highlights how one’s family is willing to leave one of their own behind in an effort to embrace change. In “The Boat”, Macleod describes how one’s actions and opinions can cause one to feel quite alienated within their own home due to conflicting ideal’s. Not only does Macleod portray the importance of adapting to change, he also demonstrates its necessity and where one’s life would be without it.…

    • 876 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Open Boat: a Response

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Throughout the 1800’s, transportation seemed more feasible upon water, as opposed to having to make an attempt by traveling on dry land. The Open Boat, as written by Stephen Crane, gives us the story of a group of men who are set to embark on a journey through the treacherous waters which are in their path. It was during this era that the idea of motored vehicles had never even been mentioned, and the idea of flight by humans was unfathomable. Although the train had been developed at this point in time, transportation through water was just a concept that everyone felt was much more adequate. It is in Crane’s novel that we can envision some of the tumultuous dangers that can occur when you least expect it, and how an individual can react to the current situation.…

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Raft of the Medusa Essay

    • 1174 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The Raft of the Medusa was created by Theodore Gericault in the years 1818 and 1819 during the French Romantic period. This oil painting, which stands at a massive 491x716cm, was created to capture the tragedy of the Medusa.This essay discusses what the Raft of the Medusa was, the reasons behind why Theodore Gericault made this painting and the political impacts it had at the time it was made. The ‘Medusa’ was a french frigate that set sail in 1816 from Rochefort heading to Senegalese. Harris (2011) states that Gericault read an account by survivors about the tragedy of the shipwreck and was intrigued to learn more. He learnt that the shipwreck was the fault of the ships captain ‘Duroy de Chaumereys’ who was an incompetent sailor and hadn't sailed in years. His poor navigation skills put them 100 miles off course and in the way of a sand bar. Hirsch-Allen (2004) describes when the ship crashed there was only room on the life boats for 250 people of the 400 present. The 150 patrons not able to get on the life rafts were forced to salvage what they could to create a make shift raft to be towed to safety by the other life rafts, although soon after agreeing to this the ropes connecting the ships was severed and the Raft of the Medusa was left stranded. The majority of the survivors on the raft died the first night, others died of exposure, starvation and some just fell overboard. The soldiers and sailors began a mutiny being the strongest onboard, and by the end of the second night another 65 people were dead. By the fourth day all the remaining passengers had turned to cannibalism in order to stay alive. Another 9 days went past and by that point there were only 15 men alive on the raft. The oil painting ‘The Raft of The Medusa’ shows the moment the men see the rescue ship and attempt to signal it. Gericault has perfectly depicted the struggle and strain the men went…

    • 1174 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Boat

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In “The Boat” by Alistair Macleod, the boat, and the ill-fitting clothes he wore significantly represent the confinement and the father’s inability to break free from tradition, reinforcing that tradition can suppress one’s dream for greater things. To begin, the boat itself is a symbol of the fathers bounding to the sea, showing his obligation to follow customs. The boat is categorize with a “marine clutch and a high speed reverse gear and was painted on an oblong plate across her stern. Jenny Lynn had been my mother’s maiden name and the boat was called after her as another link in the chain of tradition”(Macleod 3) The high speed reverse gear depicts how the father is not moving forward along with the light green name of Jenny Lynn that demonstrates the father’s sacrifice for the fishing custom to support his family. The Jenny Lynn that he receives through tradition gives him a constant reminder that his way of life may never change and that his dreams are out of his reach. Furthermore, the clothing in his closet symbolizes the father’s imprisonment with tradition. The narrator mentions “his ill-fitted serge suit, the two or three white shirts that strangled him and the square black shoes that pinched” (Macleod 4) The square black shoes that pinched him means that the life of fishing that he inherits does not fit, the life he lives is simply to overpowering that it damages him. The white shirts that suffocates him shows the struggles he faces everyday that he is unable to separate from. His attire is so inflexible that it was leaving him trapped in one place incapable to grasp his own desires. Lastly, at the father’s death his departure speculates that it is suicide to liberate his son and himself from an unhappy future bringing the fishing tradition with him. When the father’s body is discovered “the white green stubble of his whiskers had continued to grow in death. Physically as he lay there with the brass chains on his wrist and seaweed in his hair”(Macleod…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Boat - Essay

    • 1126 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The short story “The Boat” by Alistair MacLeod that was written in 1968, is a story about conflict between tradition and freedom. The father is a fisherman who only continues his job because he is chained through the past of others. The family son is restricted from his education because he spends a lot of time on the boat worried about his parents expectations. His mother believes that he will carry on and take his fathers place in the fisherman position. When the father is not out on the boat, he is in his room reading, to escape the world of imprisonment and monotonous duty. The mother of the family believes that the tradition of being a fisherman in the boat, is the only right way for her husband and children to continue living their lives. The author is trying to tell us to follow our dreams in life that won't keep us chained and unhappy and to never limit your options. As the father is unable to live freely, he is chained to his job through tradition.…

    • 1126 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Scarlet Letter

    • 5650 Words
    • 23 Pages

    4. “When the young woman—the mother of this child—stood fully revealed before the crowd, it seemed to be her first impulse to clasp the infant closely to her bosom; not so much by an impulse of motherly affection, as that she might thereby conceal a certain token, which was wrought or fastened into her dress.” (50)…

    • 5650 Words
    • 23 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Symbolism In The Open Boat

    • 1190 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In his short story, 'The Open Boat,' Stephen Crane displays to us a universe completely indifferent to the affairs of humankind; we live in an apathetic world, in which man has to fight and struggle to live. The characters illustrated in the story come face-to-face with this indifference and all are nearly overcome by nature's lack of concern with humanity. The survivors are alive primarily through determination and cooperation. We as human are alive because our constant struggles to co-exist in this universe. Crane illustrates to readers how we are all in an endless battle for our life in a world that doesn’t seem to care for us, as much as we care for ourselves.…

    • 1190 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays