Miss Strangeworth, a kind old lady in a small town where everybody knows each other.Living all by herself, known for her attracting roses in front of her house.Turns out she isn’t the lady everybody had in their mind, she was more than just an old lady.She is a bully, hurting other people by sending letters anonymously. Miss Strangeworth hurt other people with her colored paper letter that she sent all around town.”Didn’t you ever see an idiot child before? Some people shouldn’t have children, should they?” (Jackson 3). This is an example of one of Miss Strangeworth’s letters written for Helen Crane, a mother with a six month child that cannot walk yet.She is mocking the fact that the girl can’t walk yet at her age.”After thinking for a minute, although she had been phrasing the letter in the back of her head all the way home.” (Jackson 3). This shows that she does this on the daily and actually puts thought into what she’s going to write. We can see through these examples of her letters they are rude and an act of bullying. The fact that she does this anonymously makes the situation even worse.”They don’t have to own their behavior by acknowledging it within the full context of who they “really” are.”(Suler 1). Here we can see when you are anonymous, people can hide their true self …show more content…
You can tell Miss Strangeworth enjoys this, it looks like it’s more of a habit, a habit she really enjoys, a habit that fulfills her needs.”People are much more willing to speak out or misbehave”(Suler 2). The following is true, Miss Strangeworth while anonymous says everything in her mind mainly rude things but in person she doesn’t really say much.Though, she says this is for the town's greater good she doesn’t realize what she’s causing but enjoys what she
Old, lonely ladies like Adela Strangeworth could suffer from boredom. One would also think that she would probably like to work in her yard. And one could even think of her living in a small town, where she would probably also know all of the people. If one visualizes all these clichés when an old lady was mentioned, one now has a pretty good picture of Miss Adela Strangeworth, the protagonist of the short story, “The Possibility of Evil’’ by Shirley Jackson. Miss Strangeworth is 71 years old and lives in a small town.
Substance abuse can ruin the best of relationships. Throughout Glass Castle this is demonstrated by Jeanette and her father’s relationship. Rex (Jeanette’s father), is an alcoholic which over time deteriorates his and Jeanette’s relationship. When Jeanette is a young child, she sees no flaws in her father and he is her hero. Jeanette only sees the inventive creative side to him when he explains his grand ideas.
“You drink blood, Abby! You didn't tell him that!”(1034) exclaimed Betty to Abigail in the play The Crucible by Arthur Miller. In Salem, Massachusetts 1692 a group of young girls were accused of committing witchcraft. Throughout the play many people were hanged because the girls accused people that they don't like which caused them to be hanged or sent to jail. Since Abigail Williams is motivated by her love for John Proctor she will do anything she can to get rid of John Proctor’s wife, Elizabeth Proctor and take her place as John's wife.
Redcrosse Knight represents Holiness. He is a knight bearing that bears a symbol of Jesus Christ upon his shield. His holiness contains moral and religious clarity, as he fights deceptive monsters such as Errour (Book 1 #14) on behalf of his lady Una. Una herself is truth. She reminds Redcrosse that his holiness comes from God, not from within, allowing him to out think Errour and eventually destroy her and her babies.
On the corner of School Ave and 5th Street a small playground rests on a sandy pit dusted with footprints of different shapes and sizes. Each day a surfeit of students stomp over the play equipment during their fifteen minute recess. In an office close by this playground, Principal Harriet Taylor is hard at work as she reaches the final stride in her career as an administrator at Springfield Elementary School. In June when the kids abandon the playground for summer, Harriet will abandon the office, relinquishing her duties as principal for the lure of retirement. Before Harriet could even dream of the office she works in today, she was romping all over the same playground many Springfield students use today.
Of Roses and Thorns A rose may look harmless from far away, but no one seems to remember that it has harmful thorns. In Shirley Jackson’s The Possibility of Evil, Adela Strangeworth appears like a normal old lady at first; however, under all her kind words are malevolence. She anonymously writes ghastly letters to the people in her neighborhood, and watches them suffer as entertainment. Furthermore, she believes that she is getting rid of the evil in her neighborhood; yet in reality, she is the one causing it. Undoubtedly, Adela Strangeworth is a vicious, arrogant and manipulative individual who is able to deceive her entire community, so that she can change it into her perfect world.
Miss Strangeworth Character Essay: A Strange Old Spinster Miss Strangeworth is not the kind of little old lady you would expect. In the short story “The Possibility of Evil” by, Shirley Jackson, Miss Strangeworth’s family has lived in one town for all their lives and have passed on their house with the special roses on generation to generation. Living alone now, she feels as though she is the only one to keep the evil out of her town . Adela Strangeworth is a deceptively friendly, controlling, and obsessively perfect 71 year old spinster.
In the story "The Possibility Of Evil" written by Shirley Jackson there is a peculiar character called Miss Adela Strangeworth. She is an old women in a small town she has watched grow in her entire lifetime but she is less innocent than you'd think, in fact, she is a villainous women and shows how cruel and evil she is in many ways. Miss Adela Strangeworth's actions show that she is oblivious to how her methods effect her town in an evil and despicable way. She is unaware that she is the evil in the town, terrorizing its inhabitants. she writes letters to civilians who Adela thinks are "wicked" and because she is the oldest person in town, she feels obligated to protect it (Jackson 226).
Entitlement is a significant threat to society. When a person has predetermined that they possess the right to a certain privilege or special treatment, it can cause major chaos. Miss Strangeworth believes she naturally inherits the privilege of pointing out others flaws, in an attempt to perfect her town that she believes her ancestors created. “There wouldn’t have been a town… if it hadn’t been for my grandfather.” (163) This self-assigned duty of anonymously revealing the flaws of the population only reveals the true identity of Miss Strangeworth.
Eventually, Miss Strangeworth’s handwritten critiques of the townspeople become public. One evening, a teenage boy observes Miss Strangeworth delivering her notes at the post office. One of the letters fell onto the ground without Miss Strangeworth noticing. Instead of placing the letter into the mailbox, the boy delivers this message to the addressee, informing the recipient it came from Miss Strangeworth. The
Miss Strangeworth send a letter to Don Grane’s wife which would have took away the love of his life ruined their marriage, luckily Don intercepted the letter first. In return he destroyed the only thing Miss Strangeworth loved; her roses. In addition, she wrote a letter to Linda’s dad about her boyfriend Dave which made her dad disapprove off him. In the end, Miss Strangeworth botched the relationships of the town’s people. Miss Strangeworth’s character was flat and unchanged throughout the story while it was the other people in town who grow and change.
One of her pieces that has been gaining popularity lately is the short story, “The Possibility of Evil.” It’s about an old woman named Miss Strangeworth, who lives in the Strangeworth house, built directly by her grandfather. Her grandmother planted several roses in the front yard, and now Miss Strangeworth treasures those roses. But, she becomes paranoid thinking that evil is lurking everywhere in her small town, As a result, she writes letters to the people in the town to abate evil, but this only causes them to hate each other. She never signs her name, so no one knows who’s writing the letters.
When “Miss Strangeworth” sees that the baby next door is acting a little slow she sends the parents a letter about it, but in return she gets a letter saying to look at her rose garden and it is all torn up and in
Because he hails from Mississippi, Dill Harris is an outsider, but by having an Aunt living in Maycomb and being a child, Dill is easily accepted into Maycomb as another dysfunctional member of their society. Dill is introduced to us on page 7. He happens to be visiting for the summer at his Aunt’s house. His dynamic adds so much to the story; enough to alter it in tremendous ways. Dill plays varying roles within the fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama.
The Chicago production of Hamilton was caused by the unusual demand for the Broadway production (Clement, 2017). Miranda and other members of the artistic leadership cast and staged the company in New York City before moving the show to Private Bank Theatre in the fall of 2016 (Ryan, 2016). Miranda has used his view that the company is “world class” to drive home his belief that “the show is the star of the show,” rather than him or anyone else playing the title character (Youandmethismorning, 2016). Ongoing demand for tickets in the midwest production’s first year have led producers to extend the run until January 2018 (Haven’t, 2017). Not only has the public embraced the Chicago production, but the Chicago Tribune’s Chris Jones points to