Preview

The Secret Life of Bees: Mother Nature and Human Instinct

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1476 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Secret Life of Bees: Mother Nature and Human Instinct
Often, to embrace others, one must uncover their motherly nature. In The Secret Life of Bees this statement is frequently true and displayed through many situations. The Secret Life of Bees is an insightful novel which shows the importance of embracing others in tragic situations. The novel begins with the main character, Lily, explaining how at night she lies in bed and watches the bees which fly around her room. Following the death of her mother, Lily lives with Rosaleen, a maid, and her father, who is extremely restricting. Later in the novel, Lily and Rosaleen escape to Tiburon following an incident of racism in which Rosaleen is harassed by five white men. When they arrive Lily finds August, a beekeeper, and her two sisters who kindly allow Lily and Rosaleen to stay at their house until she is ready to depart. In the end Lily is given permission to live with August and discovers that her mom also once lived with August. Throughout Sue Monk Kidd’s novel many major topics are founded on the concept of Motherly Instincts in women and how this ability should be embraced not criticized. Reasons for this which can be found in the novel are: August, the Beehive, and Black Mary.
An example of motherly instinct shown throughout the novel is the actions of August towards others. Firstly, August expertly cares for all bees that she gathers honey from. One situation which displays this is when Lily states, “She was constantly checking on her hives, driving her old flatbed truck from one end of the country to other” (Kidd 93). August expresses her true motherly nature through her persistence in ensuring the health of all bees no matter the location of each hive. A second instance where August demonstrates her compassionate attitude is when she allows Lily and Rosaleen to live at her house until they are able to depart. Following Lily and Rosaleen’s arrival at August’s house, August gives Lily and Rosaleen permission to stay saying, “Well, you can stay here

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    One of the main literary elements in Sue Monk Kidd’s Secret Life of Bees, is conflict. The author displays this conflict through racial prejudice, Lily Owens and her father, Terrence Ray Owens (T. Ray), and through Lily and her mother, Deborah Fontanel. This book is set in 1964, when African American’s had just gotten the right to vote. T. Ray and Lily lived just outside Sylvan, South Carolina (The Secret Life of Bees, page…

    • 75 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Sue Monk Kidd’s The Secret Life of Bees, August acts as the unorthodox religious leader of the Daughters of Mary and contributes to Lily’s character and growth. August proves to be a leader, and a positive influence towards Lily in every action she performs. She welcomes Lily, a white girl, into her house during the 1960s, a time when racial segregation was prominent. By doing so, August goes against the popular social views, and jeopardizes her reputation for Lily. August teaches Lily many life lessons such as love, hope, and the importance of religion. Because of August, Lily becomes stronger, and more aware of the society in which she lives in.…

    • 536 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Explore the ways in which Kidd strikingly portrays the relationship between Lily and Rosaleen in the course of the novel. Sue Monk Kidd uses Rosaleen as a stand-in mother of Lily to change her from a girl to a woman, and also to adapt her to the environment that is to come. Continuing the entire way through The Secret Life of Bees is her maternal and womanly impact on Lily, and the bond between the unlikely pair is shown throughout the serious and fun events during the story becoming much stronger. Rosaleen, a strong female character, acts as a stand-in mother to Lily, as she guides and endows wisdom and knowledge onto her. Lily acts as a daughter to Rosaleen, really caring about her.…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the novel, Kidd uses the facts that August and T-Ray give to Lily to portray an even more intensified version of what really happened compared to what Lily fully remembers. This further increases the conflict with Deborah and Lily so that readers establish a firm understanding of the strength between the two women. This conflict really starts when Lily is told by T-Ray that she shot and killed her mother in a freak accident (Kidd 18-19). She later is told and refuses to believe that her mother ran away from home an had only returned to grab some clothes and then leave again (Kidd 39). Even though Lily keeps a special hatred for her father throughout the entire novel, she does start to feel as if she is a terrible person due to theses facts. The idea of killing her mother grasps on to Lily and hangs on throughout the entire novel. She eventually learns the entire truth from the family she had been staying with, that had been right there with her from the start, acting as mother figures to Lily even considering the racial differences between Lily and the black family…

    • 304 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    August is a beekeeper and while Lily and Rosaleen board with them they must help around the house. August teaches Lily the way of the bees, how much of an intelligent insect they are. Lily is memorized by the bees and feels alive, August explains how the bees are a symbol of life. Lily learns how important the bees and their honey is, the Boatright sisters use it on everything. They explain how it heals everything from dry skin to a broken heart. In chapter nine page 136 the quote that begins the chapter says “Honeybees depend not only on physical contact with the colony, but also require its social companionship and support. Isolate a honeybee from her sisters and she will soon die” Lily is shocked with the way an African American family could love and support her unlike her own father. Lily never really had a family, and the support she gets from the Boatright sisters and the bees shows how important communication and love really…

    • 1010 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lily starts catching bees in the jar, even though Rosaleen tells her that she is not going to care if Lily comes crying to her about getting stung. Lily thinks about the time Rosaleen bought her a baby chick and argued with T. Ray to let…

    • 5592 Words
    • 23 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ‘Goodbye,’ I said, and there was a tiny spring of sadness pushing up from my heart.” Lily is aware that all of her memories are in that house and her town, but she takes the risk of never returning again to help the people she loves. This is a true act of heroism taking risks for the people who mean the most to you. In The Secret Life of Bees women are made to think that they are inferior to men and that men hold all the power. Lily’s father T-Ray treated women very unequally and often said that women had less opportunities and were not able to do all the things that men can do. Growing up her whole life with only T-Ray and no mother-figure has left Lily to believe that women really are inferior and not as capable as men. After meeting the daughters of Mary Lily started to no longer underestimate the power of women as she saw the example of Mary, who was a women that was able to do remarkable things. She also learns the power of women by meeting the boatwright sisters who are all remarkably strong. All the women in The Secret Life of Bees are inner heros in their own way and they all show the true…

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sonny And Kany Comparison

    • 609 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd and Rocket Boys by Homer (Sonny) Hickam Jr., the protagonists, Lily and Sonny, respectively, both learned that they had the power to escape their seemingly predetermined and immutable fates and to decide their futures for themselves. After her mother died in a tragic gun accident when she was four, Lily Owens was left in the hands of her unloving father, T-Ray, and her colored stand-in mother, Rosaleen, feeling as if she does not fit in because she had no mother figure, not “a grandmother, or even a measly aunt” in her life (Kidd 9). Instead of staying with her father, where she would have endured abuse and neglect for the rest of her life, Lily took the reigns on her future and decided that her and Rosaleen would flee to Tiburon, South Carolina, a town written on the back of one of her mother’s belongings, in hopes of…

    • 609 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Secret Life of Bees is a novel written by Sue Monk Kidd that was published in 2001. It is about a girl named Lily who runs away from home with her maid Rosaleen. They wanted to get away from danger and racism. In the house, Lily finds out secrets about her dead mother and tries to learn more about her. The story shows a lot of cruelty. When an author uses their writing to represent cruelty in a story, it can be helpful in contributing to the overall theme or message. The cruelty that occurs in the story is racism, and it helps develop the theme of anyone can overlook stereotypes. In the book cruelty is shown when the three men are harassing Rosaleen on her way to register to vote, and when Lily was afraid to tell anyone that she and…

    • 537 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Her abusive father blames Lily for the death of her mother, not that he seems to care much about it, just enough to point fingers. After an incident involving her African-American care-taker forces Lily to run, she searches for any little traces of her mother she can possibly find. Her search brings her to the Boatright sisters, where she finds a home, answers, and more of motherly figures then she would have if her mother hadn't died.The Secret Life of Bees is a coming of age fiction novel written by Sue Monk Kidd. The story is set in the early to mid 1960s where plaid mid thigh kilts and cashmere twinsets were in style, not that Lily Owens had ever been able to experience this fashion statement due to her fathers strict ways. Lily starts in Sylvan, South Carolina, but in her search for her mother she moves the story along to Tiburon, South Carolina. The books mood is serious, due to death, injury, and other hard circumstances. Lily fights through these rough circumstances making the mood of the book also inspirational. The main lesson learned is said by a character named August whom employs Lily “Most people don't have any idea about all the complicated life going on inside hive. Bees have a secret life we don't know anything about.” This goes along with the famous quote “don’t judge a book by its cover”, because you cant always see whats going on inside a persons…

    • 1128 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She is not like Rosaleen who cooks for her and cleans up for her but she is like a mother to lily. August is Lily's second surrogate mother, and she gives lily knowledge. She intuitively recognizes what lily needs and acknowledges immediately whose daughter lily is. She waits for her until she comes to tell August a story about her mother, and she holds lily while she lets out all her rage. August give lily the fearlessness to listen to herself and that a women could be strong and who does good in the world. Then is this quote it says,” There is nothing perfect,” August said from the doorway. “There is only life ( pg 256 ).” To me that quote is very strong and it would help Lily forget about her mother. To me i feel that August teacher's lily about life and that is why she has female…

    • 1263 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Secret Life of Bees demonstrates the irrationality of racism by not only portraying black and white characters with dignity and humanity but by also demonstrating how Lily struggles with and ultimately overcomes her own racism. Kidd moves beyond stereotypes to portray whites and blacks with the multifaceted personalities that we find in real life. Lily is not a racist in the same way that the group of men that harass Rosaleen are racist, but she does evidence some prejudice and stereotypes at the start of the novel. She assumes that all African Americans are like Rosaleen, an uneducated laborer-turned-housekeeper. Lily imagines that all African Americans are likewise coarse and uneducated. But when Lily encounters unique, educated, thoughtful August Boatwright, she must change her assumptions and combat her prejudice. At first, Lily feels shocked that a black person could be as smart, sensitive, and creative as August. Recognizing and combating her shock allows Lily to realize the truth about the arbitrariness and irrationality of racism. Like Lily, June must also learn to overcome racial stereotypes. As individuals, humans can display a complex array of personality traits and characteristics, regardless of skin color or ethnicity.…

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Lily arrived at Tiburon, she, “found [herself] looking at a picture of the black Mary… exact one as [her] mother’s. She stared at [Lily] from the labels of a dozen jars of honey. Black Madonna Honey, they said” (Kidd 63). Although bees did not exactly tell her to go to the town, the picture of the black woman was printed on honey jars, which are a part of bees. In a sense, the bees are sending Lily signals by appealing to her fondness of bees and of her mother’s belongings. If it were not for her mother’s picture of the black woman, Lily would have overlooked the honey jars in the store and would have never found the place where her mother had been referring to in the picture. In addition, the concept of the bees led Lily and Rosaleen to a sheltered home, which can be seen as a blessing brought on by Lily’s curiosity. In the end, the black Mary picture from the honey jars is one of the main reasons that pushed her to leave her house and begin her…

    • 2207 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While on the way to dinner with her husband Elisa finally realizes that she had been taken advantage of. She sees that the handy man has discarded her beloved chrysanthemums in the ditch on the side of the road. She realizes that the man used flattery of her and her flowers to get work. This realization makes her break down and cry. She then understands that she is doomed to her current role in society, a passive woman, and she hates it.…

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning of the book "The secret Life of Bees", the protagonist, Lily, had a very tough life with her father, T. Ray, and Lily didn't have a mother. What I mean by this, is that when Lily was four years old, her mother dies by a gunshot and she blamed herself for what had happened; while her father, T.Ray, has always treated her bad and didn't acknowledge her.…

    • 1236 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays