Preview

Her Sweet Jerome

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
404 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Her Sweet Jerome
"Her Sweet Jerome" is a short story about a married, black couple. Their relationship is not working and they don't really love each other.
The female character is lying to herself. She pictures herself as sexy and beautiful but she is described as a big and awkward woman. She is trying to look sexy and attractive, so she can cover up her flaws.
She is also denying the truth by pretending that her husband finds her attractive, when he in fact is disgusted. Their relationship is unhealthy, mainly because he beats her “black and blue”. She is very fond of her husband, and buys him a lot of presents including a new car, but he did not like it. Jerome doesn’t really like his wife and he will rather read in his books than talk with her. But she stays with him and is a very jealous woman. She makes it her mission to find out who her husband is having an affair with, because one of the costumers at her beauty shop had told her that he was “sticking his finger into somebody else’s pie…”. She gets more determined to find the woman who is having an affair with Jerome. She gets up in the middle of the night, she threatens costumers at the beauty shop and she was looking everywhere for this woman, and in the end it turned out that he didn’t have an affair.
Jerome is a school teacher, and since the female character doesn’t have an education, her father leaves all of his money to Jerome. She comes from a “coloured family with money”. Their relationship is very unequal and he is basically using her because of her money. When he inherits the money he doesn’t tell his wife what he has spent it on, but she doesn’t really care as long as it is not spent on another woman.
The main character discovers that Jerome is working for black equality, and it is ironic because he is depressing his wife because she is not as smart as him. In the end all of the words she doesn’t understand overwhelms her and she burns Jerome’s books of revolution.
The root to their problems is their

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Such is the case for Ouiser and Clairee. Ousier’s children have all left home so the women at the hair salon are her closest friends. Clairee has many social obligations in the community, but despite this, she returns to her friends at Truvy’s Hair Salon and ultimately Ouiser for her emotional support and gossiping. Their friendship combines aspects that are traditionally masculine as well as those that are traditionally feminine—while feminine relationships focus on tenderness, and emotional bonding, masculine relationships focus on shared activities and are more ambitious and aggressive (Devito, 2015, p. 256-7). The women self-disclose a great deal about themselves, which is seen to be typically feminine. This self disclosure comes as a result of the ritual activities and interests that the women share. In the case of Ouiser and Clairee, they do not drift to serious topics easily, preferring to keep the discourse in their friendship lighthearted. However, they are not afraid to share their emotions with each other. Even Ouiser, the more emotionally-stunted of the pair is able to easily share her feelings with Clairee. For instance, as the two women were grocery shopping together, Ouiser is unafraid about expressing her regret and guilt over something she said earlier in the day. Clairee is quick to catch up on her guilt and comforts her by eloquently stating, “Ouiser, no one pays any attention to you.” While Ouiser is disclosing personal feelings to Clairee, Clairee in turn offers an aggressive rebuttal. This exchange demonstrates the fine line between masculine and feminine that their relationship…

    • 1479 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The flowers, “rosa y azucena” are metaphors that reflect her facial expression and appearance, for example, the pink colour from the rose reflects the sign of vivacity in the lady. It could also be interpreted that the rose is a sign of her hidden passion for him. The white lily is a reflection of her honesty, purity and innocence. Here, Garcilaso is comparing the lady to a flower, soft, gentle and delicate. The adjectives “ardiente, honesto” are used to describe her gaze which gives us a further insight as to what this woman is like. If she has a burning gaze, then it is without a doubt that she has passion, but she is also honest which is again, a depiction of her calmness…

    • 1341 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She is a married woman that didn’t like her husband. That being said people marry sometime not only for love, but for other reason such as gaining a political power, or for wealth in order to live better. The woman in this story although is graceful but her eyes are always on the young men. Even if she didn’t make any action, but her mind is telling her what she wants to do. Want is the desire, in the example of Dante’s Inferno, I will show the story of Francesca and Paolo in the next paragraph. That describe how lust wants another led to tragic death. In the story of the woman she begin going to forest for picking fruit and found the bravest warrior and they both did not talk much and starts rolling on the ground. It is the attraction between two young bodies and especially at night her desire is on fire that she imagines him stroking her chest and legs. Day by day, her clitoris growing bigger to the size of a man’s cock. She was shame and tries to hide but she told her mother her story. To a point her clitoris grow to it dragged along the ground. It can not hide from the people in the village, until got cut off and threw it in a middle of the river. It turns to an electric eel. Her behavior affects the…

    • 834 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It’s the relationship between Mademoiselle Reisz and Edna. Madame is very talented especially when it comes to playing the piano. Madames talents get over a lot but she doesn’t care. You first meet Reisz in about the middle of the book and from there on Madame and Edna get closer and closer. Edna even tells Reisz her love for Robert before anyone else knew. The main thing that stuck out with Madame is that she is very independant and she doesn’t care about others opinion. To me, Madame Reisz’s independance rubbed off on Edna and that would lead to Edna trying to become more…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Wasn't that the point of the book? For women to realize, we are just two people. Not that much separates us (p. 530).” Descriptions of historical events of the early activities of the civil rights movement are sprinkled throughout the novel, as are relations between the maids and their white employers. The novel is filled with details from the early-1960s culture in the United States like Martin Luther King, Jr.’s famous march on Washington…

    • 586 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lais of Marie de France

    • 1041 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Marie begins her collection of lais with the story of Guigemar, a noble knight who is cursed with the task of finding true love to heal a physical injury. This lay introduces two types of love: selfish and selfless. Selfish love is not courtly love. It lacks devotion and true loyalty. It lacks suffering and self-denial. Marie de France portrays this kind of love in the old husband of the woman whom Guigemar loves. The man locks his wife away in an enclosure guarded by a castrated man. By doing this, the husband shows a mean, limited devotion to his wife; perhaps even worse, he limits her ability to experience true love. This kind of love does not last; in fact, the husband is cuckolded when his wife has a year-long affair with Guigemar. He is made a fool, the dupe of love.…

    • 1041 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Seeing the things she doesn’t have hurts her intensely. In the French version of the text it is said that “[s]he had a well-to-do friend, a classmate of convent-school days whom she would no longer go to see, simply because she would feel so distressed on returning home. And she would weep for entire days from vexation, regret, despair and anguish” (Maupassant 1). Her thirst for more bring emotional grief onto herself. Furthermore, the climax of her life, the product of all of her wanting, is short lived by the loss of the necklace. Her self pride as a higher class woman stops her from telling the truth and decides to buy a replacement for her friend forcing her to lose all her money and material belongings and begin to live in true poverty. The narrator then describes her complete loss of beauty, “[s]he had become the woman of impoverished households — strong and hard and rough. With frowsy hair, skirts askew, and red hands” (Maupassant 5). In fact, she has changed so much that her friend could not recognized her shown because when she greats her, the narrator states “The other astonished to be familiarly addressed by this plain goodwife, did not recognize her at all, and…

    • 845 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rhetorical Analysis Woman

    • 408 Words
    • 2 Pages

    She is pretty, but moderately pretty, not overdone or arrogant. The husband, however, has a "round, self-satisfied face." He is haughty and overconfident. The reader recognizes his self-centeredness and demeans him for it. The reader is told that the woman provides a "small but glossy birthday cake" for her husband's "Occasion." There is "one pink candle" in the center of the cake. The cake's appearance parallels with that of the wife's. Both are small and modest yet in their own way appealing. The wife has supplied a "little surprise" for the one she loves and she is very proud of it. The others dining at the restaurant react with a "pattering of applause" to support the woman and encourage her. The reader echoes this applause in his own mind in order to also help the woman. However, the reader at once discovers that the man "was not pleased." Brush then quotes the thoughts of the reader towards the husband's behavior with the reaction of "Oh, now, don't be like that." The author uses the words that she knows are in the mind of the reader. The woman is then seen to be crying "all to herself." Her husband has deserted her and she is left alone "under the gay big brim of her best…

    • 408 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One detail that supports my main idea is on a story “Bien pretty” and it says “I mean I’m an artist I need a models. Sometimes. To model, you know. For a painting. I thought you would be good. Because you have such a wonderful face.” This is another stereotype that they challenge they say that women don’t work that they are just at home cooking and taking care of kids that that's their expectation but in this book this lady is an artist and that her job to draw and the writer is challenging that stereotype by saying what her job was. Another supporting detail that was on the book was on the story “Bien pretty” clemencia doesn't just want to be to be a cooking lady at home with kids she is looking for other roles that she could do. This shows that woman not only want those type of jobs but they want something different this shows that they are…

    • 711 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The troubled person Marguerite has a trouble that she can’t speak because she got assaulted 5 years ago. It is awful that a stranger raped a young person at age 8. Marguerite has to have felt very bad and got a shock, and also because of the assault she hasn’t spoken for 5 years. What kinds of friends does she have? What would people think about her? But because Mrs. Flower taught her why to speak, it looks like she is finally going to speak again like most people.…

    • 429 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Migrant Hostel Analysis

    • 971 Words
    • 4 Pages

    She examines the difficulties faced between ones self in order to try and assimilate within the community and try and enrich her sense of belonging. It centres around belonging within her culture, her family and her friends, but also the issue of not belonging within her school. We see that she struggles to fit in her school, because of the differences there is between her and her peers. One of which that she is of Italian background, while they are predominantly Anglo-Saxon and she is also not as classy or as wealthy as they are. As quoted from the novel through the use of direct speech “at St. Martha’s its all about money, prestige and what your father does for a living. I’m surrounded by girls whose father’s treat them like princesses… they think that they have everything, and you know what? They do.” This ultimately depicts that she does not belong inside her school. She distances and alienates herself from her peers who fall into this category, limiting her sense of belonging to them, showing her anti-social behaviour due to her social barriers. Therefore, we can see that one can either belong or not belong by interacting with the people and…

    • 971 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Thus we see deceit take place through and through, all for the sake of independence, or for being bound by perplexing circumstances. Johnová notes that in the comedies, along with the cross dressing, the lady usually diminishes her original rank on the social strata. It is seen that “Rosalind, the heiress to the throne, becomes a humble owner of a herd of sheep; the rich heiress Portia becomes a junior, though wise, lawyer; the noblewoman Viola becomes a pageboy.” Thus it is a sacrifice made, with an excusable purpose.…

    • 231 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Franco, like many other women in todays age, has a very hateful tongue when talking about the man that deceived her. While elaborating on how she is going to make her man suffer, one could easily tell that she has regret in her heart. “Although I hope,…

    • 1011 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The intent of Kate Chopin’s story was to show the limited options of a woman. Mrs. Pontellier was one who broke all the expected roles of an upper class woman. Mrs. Pontellier became extremely bored with her lifestyle and her husband. Her husband was never around, nor did he appear to be…

    • 651 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fantomina

    • 1281 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Haywood’s protagonist engages in her newly found freedom of interacting and controlling, beginning her display of power over Beauplaisir. Of course, while Beauplaisir thoroughly enjoys his conversations with the beautiful young prostitute, he wants to have sex with her. Being a virgin, she puts off his request by telling him she will see him the next night, and will be better off avoiding the situation in the future, but she cannot resist the interaction with Beauplaisir. Haywood writes that "she almost dy’d for another Opportunity of conversing with…

    • 1281 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays