Preview

Write about the emotion of the old man in the story "Flight" by Dorris Lessing.

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
455 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Write about the emotion of the old man in the story "Flight" by Dorris Lessing.
The old man, is not given a name nor a proper physical description by the writer perhaps to rouse the reader's emotions by letting him think of the grandfather as a universal figure. This may be an important factor in the short story as older generations can relate to the feelings of the grandfather and younger generations to the feelings of the granddaughter.

Though he is old, the grandfather is very active in that he keeps birds and trains homing pigeons.

In the beginning of the story, when the old man is attending to 'his favourite, a homing pigeon', his feelings are very serene and content. But once the granddaughter enters, his feelings make a drastic change. He at once becomes irritated and cantankerous towards her. He seems jealous in that she is waiting for her boyfriend. He is very protective and possessive towards her; he tells her that she is not 'old enough to go courting'. The grandfather thinks of his granddaughter's, Alice's, boyfriend as a 'violent bodied youth' perhaps thinking that he is not good enough for her. Immediately after, he starts acting childish by threatening to tell on her, 'I'll tell your mother!'

The next paragraph is very important as it tells the reader of the old man's true feelings. His fear of loneliness and being unloved, 'He would be left; uncherished and alone…'

The grandfather gives into his feelings quite easily for as he starts feeling lonesome and does not get the proper attention from Alice; he is 'stung' into 'love and repentance'. He thinks if she goes away, then she would forget him.

As soon as the grandfather sees Alice embracing Steven, her boyfriend, instantly his mood swings back to being spiteful and petulant. Again he becomes childlike as he goes to his daughter, Alice's mother, Lucy, to object for he is not ready to let go. It is heart wrenching for the reader to go through the aching emotions of the grandfather.

He seems disapproving of the fact that all his other granddaughters have married and may be

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    2. What do stalking the old man and the post-murder details reveal about the narrator’s character?…

    • 363 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Katherine Anne Porter’s “The Jilting of Granny Weatherall” an old woman’s light is slowly fading out and memories from her past are phasing in and out of her head as she lives out her final moments. The times she was “jilted” are poring out of her memories, releasing themselves and allowing her the peaceful death she so desires. She has good memories: memories of her children, memories of her husband, and memories of her silly father: “Her father had lived to be one hundred and two years old and had drunk a noggin of strong hot toddy on his last birthday. He told the reporters it was his daily habit, and he owed his long life to that” (Porter). But it is the bad memories she is letting go of, the memories of her jilting. Her children surround her as she dies, floating about like balloons above her, but she does not want to go yet because she has so much she still wants to do. In the medial of “The Jilting of Granny Weatherall” in paragraphs twenty-seven through twenty-nine, it constitutes the struggle of the memory of her getting jilted by the man she loved.…

    • 768 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It is easy to tell that Granny is physically deteriorating, which is believable at her age. But, it is apparent that Granny is also struggling spiritually. Although she says that, “she had her secret comfortable understanding with a few favorite saints who cleared a straight road to God for her,” it is evident that she is still in conflict with the bitterness of being jilted, and the unexpected death of her husband (Porter 81). One can even go as far to say, that the “main concern of her adult life has been to heal her broken heart” (French 63). Her greatest concern was to forget George and to prove to John that she could raise the children and manage the household without him. This caused her to become an “expert in living on track,” even after she felt that she had derailed for a time (French 65). It is important to note, that a woman who is so obsessed with orderliness “has not yet thrown out George's sixty-year-old love letters” (French 76). These letters symbolize that George is fixed into Granny’s mind, and even after all these years of compulsive orderliness she cannot “clean him out” (French…

    • 999 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Charlie’s father had an agreement with Mr peacock that Charlie was allowed every Saturday to clean the wood yard and take home the scraps of wood to heat the house . Charlie walked in on mr peacock abusing ma and to try and protect ma he hit him in the head with a cricket bat and Squizzy negotiated with mr peacock so that Charlie could get wood . “ I found myself wishing the bruises were back , at least then I could I see what’s wrong with her ” . Charlie’s ma went into a episode of depression Charlie has no idea on how to help ma . Charlie had to learn that he had to give ma and her space to figure out how she wanted to deal with it . Everyone around him kept relating him back to I his father and how he had to be the man of the house . As a 14 year old Charlie had a lot on his mind all the time , worrying about his family and how they would survive , his working environments . He and his ma were so close and seeing her like this broke his heart . This event was a tough time for Charlie and showed him that it was time to grow up…

    • 611 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The father thinks back to Della’s funeral and seeing how sad Eric was crying against the doorway. Eric was seen as gentle and understanding to his father who was tumbling over his words. When the father brings up a childhood story about the mother, Eric is “wary” and “twitches” up, and tensions builds when Eric wants to know when it was said and the father “‘can’t remember’” (33, 37). The father desperately wants to remember Della by telling Eric a story of how she fell asleep as a child. When her name is mentioned, it is like ripping up a band-aid to Eric, and he gets annoyed with his father for bringing up a painful memory that he is trying to let go of. The fact that the father can’t be remember when Della told him the story adds to Eric’s annoyance when he lets out a yawn. In the next paragraph, the father expresses his fear of losing his memories of his wife which shows why he wants to continue to talk about her as Eric is trying to do the opposite and forget. When Eric remembered the story of the “spark,” it “surprised” his father because it was the first time that he had talked about something involving Della in “weeks” (43, 44). Eric brings up a story about when he was little and the family was watching a fireworks show; and a…

    • 1460 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The grandmother who remains unnamed all throughout in the story is the protagonist and the central character of Flannery O’Connor’s “A Good Man is hard to Find, a tragic story of a family who decided to go on vacation but got killed randomly on the road by a criminal on the loose named “The Misfit”. She is endowed with a joyful spirit, a passion in life in spite of her age. She is a non-stereotypical woman whose old fashion clothing and beliefs contradict her strong, manipulative mind, an opposite trait of a passive and complacent woman in her time. The Grandmother is a smart woman who knows how to assert herself by trying to use all the available resources around her and manipulating them by appealing to their morality. From this information we say that the grandmother is a round and dynamic character as her character changes from being a manipulative mother to her son Bailey, to a quirky, playful grandmother who ignite her grandchildren’s imagination by her stories, and finally, to a humble human being who experiences “awakening” and acceptance of defeat in her moral battle and failed manipulation scheme with The Misfit.…

    • 1474 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The family has gone through hard times, but the biggest fight happens when Walter is planning on accepting money from The Man. Mama is disappointed, but she loves him still. Beneatha is so angry she says “There is nothing left to love.” Mama rebukes her for her comment, and this scene displays the fierce love Mama has for her family. Even though they do not agree with Walter’s plan to give in, the whole family suspects and hopes he will come to his senses and make the right decision. They have faith in him, even though to this point he has not made the best choices. Internally, the choice was difficult, but especially because his son is present, Walter makes the right choice and preserves the dignity of his family. Throughout the play, the family loved and supported Walter, even when he made very bad…

    • 532 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although he has been wandering away from home for almost twenty years, the only thing that keeps him alive is the thought of his wife and son that are back at home waiting for him. He embraces his mortality and it becomes the basis of what gives him the strength to withstand all the difficulties he faces.…

    • 513 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Granny is saved of the embarrassment of bearing an illegitimate child, by the proposal of John. Granny marries John and has a good life with him, in fact she says it was, “Better than I hoped for even.” But alas, John leaves her also as he dies at an early age; the early death of John is another let down for Granny. John was the one who was supposed to be there for her and now due to his early death he has left her alone with the children. She must be responsible for them and handle all of the ranch chores by herself. Granny worries what John will think of her now that she is an old woman and he is still young, she wonders if he will still love her or if he would see her as an old unattractive women and betray her again.…

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Grandparents are the parents of one’s own parent. Grandparents spoil and care for you whenever your parents are not. In some situations, grandmothers are more involved with the grandchildren than any family member. In “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, the main characters is the Grandmother and her son, Bailey. The son’s family goes on a family vacation to Florida. The grandmother tags along after she insisted not to ride along. She didn’t want to be left alone at home and wanted to keep the kids company on the ride to Florida. Throughout the whole story, the family experienced certain events that the grandmother is to blame for the family’s fate and tragic ending. She told stories to the children about the old days and compared it to present day in the story. Also she insisted to make a couple stops and gestures that could have been avoided if she did not come on the trip. “A Good Man is Hard to Find” is an ironic title for this short story by Flannery O’Conner. The southern Gothic writer wrote about the things she observed in Georgia. Her stories were far from the normal because her ending fates of the characters were dramatically disastrous. Clearly stated, the grandmother is to blame for the family’s fate because of the unexpected effort to stop at the plantation house, the cat a board the car ride, and recognizing the Misfit and his fellows.…

    • 1528 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    A Good Man Is Hard To Find

    • 1120 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Throughout, the story we see the grandmother being manipulative, deceitful, and selfish. Aruther Breatha, the author of the article “O’Connor’s A Good Man is Hard to Find” even compares the grandmother morally and philosophically to the serial-killing Misfit (Breatha 246). The grandmother is seen being manipulative when she is trying to change her son Baily’s mind about going to Florida, so she can go to Tennessee. She is described as “seizing at every chance to change Bailey’s mind” (O’Connor 364). She even tries to make Baily feel bad about taking his children in the direction where a criminal is a loose (O’ Connor 364). She has no care, for what the family as a whole want to do, and is only concerned, with what she wants to do, and where she wants to go on vacation. When all her attempts to stop the family from going to Florida fail, she starts to become deceitful. The first of her deceitful action is bring the cat along even though Baily said not to so, then when the family is on the road the grandmother want to stop at an old plantation she used to visit as a child. Baily does not want to stop so she lies and tell the children that “There was a secret panel in this house” (O’Connor 368), and that it was filled with silver. This of course drives the children to bug, Baily, and the grandmother get what she wants. Once, the family turns down…

    • 1120 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Box Man

    • 743 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This essay implies to the reader that loneliness isn’t always a vile thing. The author compares somebody who has absolutely nothing in life but enjoys the solitude, to people who roam through life alone, seeking for company—but never find it. The author compares the chosen lifestyle of the box man, to the undesired for loneliness of the victims. The author explains that although one may be poor and alone, it does not mean that one is unhappy. For example, in paragraph 12 it is explained that the mayor has offered him help, but the box man pushes it away. In paragraph 18 it is described how the box man enjoys his dark life. It is portrayed that life is a solo journey and that one may be much more miserable by going through life accompanied than by being a collector of boxes.…

    • 743 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning, the first sentence O’Connor lets the readers know that this story is not told directly by one of the characters & also who this story is mainly about. (1) The grandmother is the character we are told the most about and she is also the only character whose feelings and emotions are clear to readers. Flannery O’Connor also illustrates point of view by the names of the characters in the story. Bailey’s wife is also known as “the grandmothers daughter in law” or “ the children’s mother” Here, O’Connor shows how the grandmother feels, she only thinks of her daughter in law as her son’s wife and her grandchildren’s mother.…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Up the Coulee

    • 936 Words
    • 4 Pages

    After a decade of not seeing his mother and brother, Howard returns to his hometown in Mississippi. It is evident how thrilled he is. As the train approaches town, he begins "to feel curious little movements of the heart, like a lover as he nears his sweetheart" (par. 3). He expects this visit to be a marvelous and welcoming homecoming. His career and travel have kept his schedule extremely full, causing him to previously postpone this trip to visit his family. Although he does not immediately recognize his behavior in the past ten years as neglectful, there are many factors that make him aware of it. For instance, Mrs. McLane, Howard's mother, has aged tremendously since he last saw her. She has "grown unable to write" (par. 72). Her declining health condition is an indicator of Howard's inattentiveness to his family; he has not been present to see her become ill. His neglect strikes him harder when he sees "a gray –haired woman" that showed "sorrow, resignation, and a sort of dumb despair in her attitude" (par. 91). Clearly, she is growing old, and Howard feels guilty for not attending her needs for such a long time period: "his throat [aches] with remorse and pity" (par. 439). He has been too occupied with his "excited and pleasurable life" that he has "neglected her" (par. 92). Another indication of Howard's neglect is the fact that his family no longer owns the farm and house where he grew up. They now reside in a…

    • 936 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mr. Butt

    • 1988 Words
    • 8 Pages

    And in this chapter we met an old man who used to come to the author’s club, as many of men did. But he was not the ordinary man, so that is why the author told us about him.…

    • 1988 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics