Preview

Dorthy Parker

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
869 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Dorthy Parker
There are many ways to express one's self, including art, writing, and the music one listens to. All of these things help people become in sync with others and it helps people show their feelings through the things they enjoy. Dorothy Parker used poetry to describe and let out her feelings about the major events in her life. The poems that best reflect Dorothy Parker’s depressing life include, “A Whistling Girl”, “A Certain Lady”, and “Resume.” The poem “A Whistling Girl” deals with Parker’s childhood. On August 22, 1893 in West End New Jersey, Dorothy Rothschild was born. She was the daughter of Annie Elize and Jacob Rothschild. “Her relative privileged and happy beginnings were brutally cut short by the death of her mother when Parker was only four years old” (Parker 2). The passing of her mother made Parker feel as if she needed to become a more independent person (Parker 1). Her feelings toward her mother’s death made Parker take a new outlook on life. However, the relationship with Parkers stepmother and father was marked by hatred and fear. Dorothy’s father was very hypocritical of the actions Dorothy made and was a very self opinionated man (Spartacus 1). Parker’s stepmother was crazy and treated Dorothy worse than her own children (Parker 3). While being raised by her stepmother and father Dorothy came to realize this was not the life she wanted or the people she wanted to spend life with. Parker’s childhood made her resort to bad decisions as an adult, and her stepmother made many decisions for Parker that she didn’t approve of.
Parker’s stepmother forced her to attend a catholic grammar school (Gale 1). Later, Parker attended Miss Dana’s, an exclusive New Jersey girl’s school, where she received an excellent classical education. At Miss Dana’s she read “La Roche” poetry, wrote poetry, and also became interested in social issues (Gale 2). As her feelings about school and her family changed so did her attitude. Parker began to abruptly act

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Emma Parker

    • 739 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Indications: The patient is a 69 year old black female who fell landing on her right hip. She was seen in the Emergency Room where physical exam and x-ray revealed an intertrochanteric right femoral fracture. She was admitted to Dr. Loyd’s service .…

    • 739 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    student in New Jersey wasn’t fair desire, but a common obsessive about her. The fantasies of Martha…

    • 464 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The entire poem is written with a tone of sadness or depression. This evokes the senses of the reader by being able to sense how the girl is feeling and see how the words of others affect her. It can be pictured, this little girl who plays with the Barbie doll and it is just a toy, but to others it is the appearance that society wants and she soon realizes that when a fellow classmate hurts her with mean words. She can not go on with the fear that everyone sees her as imperfect or flawed, so in the end she gives up on trying and eventually gives up on herself. A simile in the poem, “Her good nature wore out/like a fan belt,” the message here is that she has given up on everything.…

    • 507 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Q – ‘Poetic power, dramatic presentation and compelling psychological insights provide the richness of her poetry. A pervading pessimism clouds her achievement.’…

    • 538 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Flannery O'Connor Essay

    • 501 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Flannery O’Connor cleverly creates for us timeless short stories about simple characters that appear easy to understand. Beneath the words she manages to communicate an intricate message to us regarding faith, love and family. That we are bound together as families in love, even though we do not always like one another. In most families, we tolerate each other shortcomings, like the nagging and bossiness of the grandmother, and the rudeness of the children. We see in her characters, many of the good and bad behaviors that we all accept are the best and worst of each of us on an everyday basis. The impatience and cranky nature of the father in “A Good Man is Hard to Find” and the fascination of parker with tattoos, are symbolic of many of the eccentric and crazy behaviors and habits that family members often exhibit. With faith in those we love, and a belief in God, we accept and tolerate the dichotomy of good and evil operating in all humans everyday.…

    • 501 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    John P. Parker

    • 770 Words
    • 4 Pages

    His Promised Land: The Autobiography of John P. Parker, Former Slave And Conductor on the Underground Railroad.…

    • 770 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Metaphor

    • 541 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Besides their similarities, Miss Hancock and Charlottes mother are so different that they contrast each other. Miss Hancock is unmarried woman who encourages Charlotte to be expressive. On the other hand, Charlotte’s Mother doesn’t support or care much about Charlotte’s enthusiasm for the subject. As a child, playing with toys wasn’t allowed because it made a mess “A toy ceased to be a toy once it left the toy cupboard” (p 65). Miss Hancock loves teaching children, so if she were Charlotte’s mother, she would tell her to make as much of a mess as she wants. Miss Hancock and Charlotte’s mother are an example of character foil.…

    • 541 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Alice Walker Outling

    • 1279 Words
    • 6 Pages

    F. In the winter of 1965 she wrestled with suicide after deciding to have an abortion, and some of her poems recount the despair and isolation she felt at the time. (source # 1)…

    • 1279 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Men are governed by lines of intellect - women: by curves of emotion.” (Joyce) Women, when making decisions, or in this case writing poems, are more affected by emotion and events around them. The year 1923 was during an era that brought many new ways in which women were viewed due to the end of the women’s rights movement. The 19th amendment had been passed 3 years prior giving women the right to vote and more of a voice in society. Also around this time, Edna St. Vincent Millay wrote the poem “I, Being a Woman, and Distressed”. The poem and Millay’s personality have a very feminist and independent feel which was against society’s expectations at the time. Millay was impacted by contemporary events when writing her poem and uses diction,…

    • 1109 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Narrative Rough Draft

    • 1791 Words
    • 8 Pages

    I began writing in that journal as if I had written for years, pouring my heart out and staining those pages with my hurt filled anguish and severely damaged perceptions of love. Staining those lines with lead and eraser marks began to lift off a burdensome mountain of oppression put upon me by my child hood, allowing me to be reborn anew, like a phoenix from the ash of death. I began to share more with my social workers and slowly began to feel again! To appreciate life in it’s most little of simplicities was something I could have never experienced without the power to write. And that is why I can relate to “Why I Write”, by Joan Didion. The first descriptive sentence says so much. In fact, she need not say more. Joan Didion…

    • 1791 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    To the uninitiated, the significance of Flannery O 'Connor 's Parker 's Back can seem at once cold and dispassionate, as well as almost absurdly stark and violent. Her short stories routinely end in horrendous, freak fatalities or, at the very least, a character 's emotional devastation. Flannery O 'Connor is a Christian writer, and her work is message-oriented, yet she is far too brilliant a stylist to tip her hand; like all good writers, crass didacticism is abhorrent to her. Unlike some more cryptic writers, O 'Connor was happy to discuss the conceptual and philosophical underpinnings of her stories, and this candor is a godsend for the researcher that seeks to know what makes the writer tick.…

    • 1132 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jamaica Kincaid Girl

    • 889 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Girl, written by Jamaica Kincaid, is a short story about the relationship between a mother and daughter. Actually, it reflects the true living background in Kincaid’s time by listing a series of imperative sentences, which show how the mother had a certain life style on how she wanted her daughter to live up. In this story, the setting and tone and characters interlace and work together to create an intense description of the daily conversation between the mother and daughter, and they present the low social status of working-class women’s living attitude.…

    • 889 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Her passion and expectations about composing poetry was stand out conspicuously when the reader looked her biography. The experiences she had in the poetry are something hard to do for commonplace people. Detailed pictures about her suicide situation shows her sense of poignancy. Her lifelong extraordinary experience definitely did not make her look vulnerable and passive women. She can be an aggressive like a roughneck. She showed her strong will that she can go to extremes to vocalize her torment.…

    • 1290 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dorothy Parker's "Arrangement in Black and White" is set during a dinner party for the host's friend, Walter Williams, an African American musician. Though the party is celebrated in his name, most of the conversation takes place between the host and the main character, the woman with pink velvet poppies. From the conversation, the audience can deduce that though this woman admires Walter Williams's musical talent, she is unable to let go of the racist sentiment against his African American heritage. The author adds a flavor of sophisticated cynicism as she makes this point clear by having the main characters ironically make frequent references concerning how "untroubled" she is about the color of his skin. This argument is further emphasized when she greets Walter Williams; her body language and topic choice gives her predicament away. Through this story Parker implies that with the end of slavery did not entail the changing of the heart's and mind's of its supporters, no matter how much one can deny it to oneself.…

    • 675 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dorothy Parker writes in her poem “Unfortunate Coincidence,” “By the time you swear you're his, / Shivering and sighing. / And he vows his passion is / Infinite, undying. / Lady make note of this-- / One of you is lying.” Surely, by most standards this sort of remark on romance would be considered by many to be pessimistic, however the story of Parker’s life reads like that of a romantic tragedy: she is unhappy in her marriage, and after an abortion she attempts suicide twice, then even divorces her husband, Eddie Parker. Being in the 1920’s, where sexual and romantic freedom for women was still newly emerging and women are still expected to maintain purity and uphold traditional values, her story is still viewed as an extraordinary one of…

    • 1502 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays