Preview

The 13 Clocks

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
590 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The 13 Clocks
Analysis

The 13 Clocks is a fairy tale told by a twentieth century author. Its themes are clearly statements about the moral concerns of the time and perhaps are intended more for adults than for children, even though James Thurber used the form of a child’s story. One of the story’s meanings is that a true life is in a way being like a child. Adults responded to Thurber’s message: The book sold well, going into nine printings.

Thurber had earlier written fairy tales for children as well as another fairy tale for adults called The White Deer (1945). That book is thematically and stylistically related to The 13 Clocks. Both are filled with personal references. For example, although Thurber is far from being the duke, he makes the duke one-eyed, and Thurber himself was almost blind. Both also display Thurber’s brand of humor. The duke, for example, counting the jewels brought back by Zorn, responds to a criticism by the Golux with the very reasonable statement that “We all have flaws,” something with which all readers would agree; the duke, however, humorously adds, “and mine is being wicked.” The story is filled with Thurberian plays with language and with literary references, from allusions to W. S. Gilbert’s The Mikado (1885); to strange words such as “strutfurrow,” rare words such as “tosspot,” and invented words such as “guggle” and “zatch”; to alliterations, rhythmic sentences, occasional regular metrical passages, rhymes, and wonderful similes, as when the nameless traveler disappears “like a fly in the mouth of a frog.” Thurber also employs deliberate unreality; for example, in the image of the “moon that held a white star in its horn.” He is skilled in the use of revelatory humor such as the Golux’s wavering statement concerning the duke’s actions: “I’m certain he will stay his hand, I think.”

The Golux sums up the themes of the book when he says to the two lovers, “Keep warm. Ride close together. Remember laughter. You’ll need it even in the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Major uses a variety of fairy tale beauties and a tone of bleak hopelessness to get her point across. Men expect women to be that kind of fairy tale but in reality they are not. The line that best expresses this tone of satire and bleak hopelessness is "other princes had made it through my forest." The girl in this line openly confesses and admits her imperfections and she is comfortable with them. However, the boy she is with insists upon making her into something that she is never going to be. "The Diverse Causes," on the other hand, has a tone of violence. This tone of violence represents the fierce passion of the narrator to his lover. The line that represents this tone is "The kitchen window hangs scarred, shattered by winter hunters." Although the narrator uses the words "scarred", "shattered", and "hunters" to represent the fierce passion to his lover, he uses the word "careful" in the lines, "careful not to break the rhythms/of your sleeping head," to signify his tenderness and that he is gentle and is taking care of his beloved one with profound passion to her. "Puce Fairy Book" and "The Diverse Causes" both use an honest tone that is lacking of any disguise. The word "Puce" in" Puce Fairy…

    • 788 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It is a book of our times, and yet a period piece that pre-dates some of the more stringent child-abuse laws. The children tend the parents as well as themselves, and rise above their circumstances. Resilience, courage and society’s assumptions are addressed.…

    • 424 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    sample

    • 839 Words
    • 4 Pages

    “Why, Grandmother, what big teeth you have!” Almost anyone would recognize those words addressed to the big bad wolf in the fairy tale” Little Red Riding Hood,” just as most people would also recognize “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo” as the words of the fairy godmother from “Cinderella.” What most people may not realize, however, is that although “Cinderella” and” Little Red Riding Hood” are both fairy tales often read to children as bedtime stories, “Cinderella” is actually a much better fairy tale because of the description of the main character, the kind of conflict involved, and the theme of that particular story.…

    • 839 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fairy tales are part of every Western child 's upbringing, and have been for decades. The method of telling and the stories them selves may have changed from the purely oral tradition to that of the written word with the introduction of the printing press and more importantly the Chap Book in the eighteenth century (Montgomery, 2009 p. 13). But the basic core of the tales remain hundreds of years on to instruct and delight children to this day. These days children are surrounded by fairy tales in the form of the books read to them at home or nursery/school, television and film adaptations, cartoons and even advertisements, as well as Christmas pantomimes. Each version they see will have differences, some more subtle than others, but the basic story will be the same.…

    • 2178 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fairytales: when someone says that word, the first thing that might come up in your mind is probably kid’s reading Cinderella. Fairytales’ simplicity and accuracy in delivering a moral to young kids and adults is wonderful. We’d give an adult a eerie look if we caught them reading a kids book on the train to themselves. The reason behind our thought is cause it’s a kids book why would an adult read it but behind all this is the difference of interpreting stories for adults and children. Stories like Juniper Tree, Snow White, and Little Red Cap include hidden messages through violence and imagery and dialogue. Fairy tales teach children how to grasp the meaning and power behind storytelling. In this paper I will discuss the vast ways in which a child and adult interpret fairytales. Its…

    • 1983 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Snow White Analysis

    • 1103 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Fairy tales are often significant for enhancing imagination and different perspectives in the readers. Fairy tales are symbolic in our history and may currently still be present in our society. Fairy Tales also allow us to analyze the emotion of the characters and compare that to our culture as well as our own daily life. In “Snow White and her Wicked Stepmother” and the classic “Snow White” by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm both focus intently on how envy, competition, hard-work, and mother daughter relationships and how that is still applied in our world today. The classic “Snow White” allows the reader to focus specifically on how the dwarves are emblematic toward the American dream and toward the common working man…

    • 1103 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Fairytales. When we hear or see that calming word, we automatically think of beautiful expensive ball gowns, charming handsome Princes, pumpkins turning into carriages, and the infamous ending of true loves first kiss. When growing up, many of us had these wonderful tales read to us before bed or at school with all of our friends. Fairytales, having been around for centuries, sends all kinds of important moral messages from being a child to facing the ‘beautiful’ world of adulthood. Growing up and being placed in the adult world, we come to terms that fairytales aren’t the classic stories of Little Red Riding Hood, Briar Rose, or Cinderella that we all know and love, its much more than that. We are surrounded by Fairytales, almost as if they…

    • 1583 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    1984 Text Notes

    • 17325 Words
    • 70 Pages

    “It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen” (p.3)…

    • 17325 Words
    • 70 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Cited: Bates, Laura R. ““Sweet Sorrow”: the Universal Theme of Separation in Folklore and Children 's Literature.” The Lion and the Unicorn. 31.1 (2007): 48-64. Print.…

    • 1647 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Repent Harlequin Essay

    • 1384 Words
    • 6 Pages

    “’Repent, Harlequin!’ Said the Ticktockman” illustrates a futuristic society governed by time. In 2389, when the story takes place, man has become so obsessed with punctuality, that if one does not posses this quality, he can be punished by death. Those who become heroes and strive to save the world from destruction by the clock become enemies because they are non-conformists.…

    • 1384 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fall Protection

    • 8717 Words
    • 35 Pages

    Tolkien, J.R.R. “On Fairy-Stories.” Essays Presented to Charles Williams. Ed. C.S. Lewis. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company: Grand Rapids, 1947.…

    • 8717 Words
    • 35 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literary Analysis Essay

    • 811 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the fairy tales, the protagonists always gain their Snow Whites in the end and they all live happily ever after. In fact, all protagonists’ fate is decided by the narrator’s hand. Just like the literary works we have recently read, including the poems “Sunday Greens” by Rita Dove, “Sinful City” by Jaroslav Seifert and the excerpt from Like Water for Chocolate from Laura Esquivel, the characters’ fate was sealed from that moment. Therefore, the most relevant theme through three works is that fate is for those too weak to determine their own destiny.…

    • 811 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fairy tales are probably the most important and constant part of our society. The stories are embedded deep within us since childhood, and are relived constantly throughout adulthood. What they represent haunts us, and their meanings are as obvious as the mundane paths of lives we all go through. Whereas children seem to be lacking full understanding of them, adults are no strangers to the world of fairy tales. As C. S. Lewis once said, “Some day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again.”…

    • 975 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In the world of scholarly fairy tale analysis, Maria Tatar is a prominent figure. Tatar is strongly opinionated regarding these tales and believe that the meaning of them is often misrepresented- fairy tale’s do not teach objective morals and values to children, but rather provide a platform to express the contrast of anxieties and desires to further succeed through life’s struggle. Using Tatar’s claim regarding desires and anxieties as an analysis tool to help understand complicated variants of the world’s favorite fairy tales is a rewarding and and educational process. Delving into a story that most assume they already “know” in a conceptually different way expands the mind and makes prominent issues that may not already be clear just…

    • 1797 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    For many generations, the fairy tales, loved by many, have been passed down from relatives and friends, being shared and retold by one individual to the next. Growing and evolving as the years go by, these stories live on through readers’ lives. The deep connection between the timeless tales and the lives of people accentuates its need to exist in society. These fairy tales mold and shape people’s own stories and are a reflection of what individuals experience and encounter. During times when one feels lost and disoriented, fairy tales are a tool of navigation; they unveil a path and guide one down it. Not only do these tales provide insight to oneself, they impart an educational source to children and individuals in society. They spark and…

    • 1320 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays