In the short story “Mrs. Buell”, Kate learns that everything is not as it seems through a series of events. When one considers certain factors such as abrupt personality change, encounters with unexpected people, and changes in first impression, it can be seen that there are many things to be discovered that may change our impression of one’s being. Kate is startled by Mrs. Buell’s actions when, she hurts her knee while walking into Mrs. Buell’s convenience store. Although, Mrs. Buell shows compassion towards her, Kate can’t quite believe that Mrs. Buell had shown any type of sympathy. This is evident when Kate assumes, “She was probably sorry now that she’d fixed my knee. After all, everybody knew she hated kids.” Her assumptions are confirmed just after Mrs. Buell’s empathetic demeanour alters into one of apathy. The reader notices this when Mrs. Buell commands the boy that comes into her store to "Make up [his] mind or take [himself] off." even though he had only lingered for mere seconds. Nonetheless, Kate never seemed to think much about Mrs. Buell, but she understands that "Selling stuff to kids for a small trickle of …show more content…
Buell when she is informed of her passing away. She wonders if “she had anyone who loved her?” as she recalls “Glo’s voice, talking about her, had been so cold”. In her trail of thought, Kate feels remorse and regret as she wonders “why hadn't [Kate] smiled back?” Kate also feels sadness on a more personal level as she attempts to imagine Mrs. Buell as a child but only comes up with the image of her “putting that band-aid on [her] knee”. This realization, along with the few incidents with Mrs. Buell and her children suggests that Kate recognizes that Mrs. Buell had had her own life to lead and was not simply the convenience store owner, but much more. Kate’s perception of Mrs. Buell changes drastically through her understanding that Mrs. Buell had not always been a hard person, but had a kindhearted side to
His dropping of her hand feels like a rejection, so she quickly returns to obsessing and fantasy to not have to deal with the vulnerability. She labels it a “distraction”, something insignificant convincing herself that she felt nothing. This interaction portrays Kate as afraid of reality and vulnerability. She is losing awareness of her fantasy, and is beginning to use it in everyday life to avoid negative feelings. “I don't know what to make of it” indicates Kate's concern and lack of control in the situation.
The truth is, dishonesty and lying are both inevitable and are two of the most fundamental parts of society. However, many times, lies and secrets wipe away the good in life, leaving destruction behind that is hard to recover. In the novel “Reconstructing Amelia” by Kimberly McCreight, secrets and their potentially toxic consequences tend to revolve around the lives of Kate Baron, a single mother, and Amelia Baron, her fifteen year old daughter. Kate forming her relationship with Amelia based on secrecy and lying eventually comes back to haunt her as Amelia subconsciously punishes her by lying to her in return. Using out and out, omission and facade both Kate and Amelia successfully manage to push each other away, which in the end, destroys
Loving Others Love can significantly impact people’s actions, helping them persevere through hardships to continue communicating with their loved ones. In “A Worn Path,” by Eudora Welty, Phoenix Jackson makes regular trips to the town of Natchez to get medicine for her beloved grandson who swallowed lye. During one of her trips, she encounters many obstacles, including her cataracts and age, a thorny bush, a log laid across a creek, and a racist hunter, though she is able to reach the town regardless of all of them. Once she is there, she purchases the medicine, and with money that she steals and begs for, she also buys a paper windmill for her grandson. Phoenix uses love as a reason to persevere in uncomfortable situations for her grandson,
In the story “The Unlikely Romance of Kate Bjorkman” the setting takes place in a big house that is going through a cold and snowy December located in St Paul, Minesoda around Christmas time, and within that big splendid house there resides our main charactar Kate Bjorkman. She is 6ft tall, wears glasses, and is 17 and like all teenagers she will struggle with many things such as: friends, school, her appearence, and having a crush on her brothers’ ,Bjorn, best friend, Richard. Liking your brothers best friend is not to easy and Kate learns that as she writes a romantic novel about her life when her brother and Richard stay over for the holidays. What will happen when people get in he way of Kate and Richard’s soon to be romance? Will Kate get her Christmas wish?
Kate is sworn off by her community while Petruchio gets to share a laugh with the other men, despite having arguably acted worse than her. Shakespeare intended for the viewers of the play to leave feeling guilty about the harshness Kate met; an inequality that is only apparent when done so excessively, especially considering the patriarchal forces in society at that time. Unlike Katherine, many women of that time would not have been given the opportunity to speak and act so boldly without severe punishment. Because of this, Shakespeare used her character as a medium through which to make society question its practices behind the thin veil of
It all begins the time she fell of her horse. On a trip back to Petruchio's house, Gremio, Petruchio and Kate were all riding horse until Kate had abruptly fallen off and landed in a massive mud puddle. Being her usual self, Katherine freaked out and expected help, but did not receive any from Petruchio, nor Gremio. This is the beginning of Kate understanding her acts of ill-mannered ways. Another example of this is when they arrive at Petruchio's house.
In the novel, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Betty Smith takes the reader through the life of a girl named Francie Nolan, who was born in the early 1900’s. Francie was the first born child, and raised by her mother, Katie and her father, Johnny. Once Francie’s little brother, Neely is born, she struggles to gain the same attention and acceptance from her mother that she gives to him, and desires equal love. Although Katie plays as a minor character, she presents an important part in the novel, as her behaviors highlight the weaknesses and strengths in Francie, and illuminate the meaning of the work as a whole. While Francie grows up to learn and overcome many obstacles in her life, the relationship between her and her mother is a continuous internal and external battle that she cannot grow out of.
“I’ll have no bigger. This doth fit the time, and gentlewomen wear such caps as these” exploited the grand and gentleness of Kate womanly side (73 and 74). However, she does not completely abandon her thoughts toward believing a woman should not be lower than a man. Kate 's last speech at the end of play may sound like she has been defeated; to admit that a woman should be lower a man, but her line, “Why are our bodies soft and weak and smooth, unapt to toil and trouble in the world, but that our soft conditions and our hearts should well agree with our external parts?” brings out a contradiction to question why must women harbor what their external shell looks like to define who they are (181-184). Within her last speech, Kate mentions this quote to illustrate the manifest
The short story “Miss. Brill” authored by Katherine Mansfield is about the protagonist of the story Miss Brill and her weekly Sunday jaunt to the Jardin Publiques. Miss Brill goes to the park to hear the band play and to people watch. In “Miss Brill” Mansfield depicts the story of a lonely old women who in an attempt to alleviate her loneliness, creates a fantasy world where she is an actress on a stage and the strangers in the park are her supporting cast. Miss Brill gets great enjoyment from her weekly visit to the park and she receives satisfaction from observing others and their interactions, and by eavesdropping on their conversations which is evident when Mansfield writes “Oh how fascinating it was! How she enjoyed it!
To be trapped in one's own mind may be the worst prison imaginable. In Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper", the narrator of the story is constantly at battle with many different forces, such as John, her husband, the yellow wallpaper that covers the walls of her room, and ultimately herself. Throughout the story the narrator further detaches herself from her life and becomes fixated on the yellow wallpaper that surrounds her in her temporary home, slowly driving her mad. The narrator of "The Yellow Wallpaper" is a major and dynamic character as she is the main character of the story, and throughout the story her personality and ways of thinking change drastically.
The reader soon discovers, this feeling that comes to Mrs. Mallard is joy and relief, she feels this because she can now finally be her own person. Mrs. Mallard comes to the realization that her husband had been oppressing her for years, “There would be no powerful will bending..”, and she was finally free of that. Before the passing of her husband, Mrs. Mallard was scared of living a long life because of the treatment she received from him. After his passing she had a much different outlook, “There would be no one to live for her during those coming years; she would live for herself.” This shows that Mrs. Mallard was excited to now live her own life without being told what she was to do.
Further, situational irony is present through the reaction that Louise Mallard has after learning about her husband’s death. Upon first learning of her husband’s death she is very devastated and distraught. As soon as she is alone in the bathroom however, it is clear to the readers she is not as upset. In fact she is slightly relieved in that “she saw beyond that bitter moment a long procession of years to come that would belong to her absolutely. And she opened and spread her arms out to them in welcome” (235).
Self-Identity and Freedom The story of an hour by Kate Chopin introduces us to Mrs. Mallard as she reacts to her husband’s death. In this short story, Chopin portrays the complexity of Mrs. Mallard’s emotions as she is saddened yet joyful of her loss. Kate Chopin’s story argues that an individual discovers their self-identity only after being freed from confinement.
Stephanie Plum, Morelli, and Ranger are three main characters in the book, One for the Money, by Janet Evanovich. Stephanie is a young woman struggling to get by in the city of Trenton, New Jersey. After losing her job, she goes against her family’s request and gets the dangerous job of a bounty hunter. She gets assigned Joe Morelli, who was accused of murder and who happened to be a childhood enemy. Stephanie is very inexperienced and receives help from a professional bounty hunter, Ranger.