Preview

A Commentary on Little Boy Crying

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1060 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
A Commentary on Little Boy Crying
A Commentary on an extract from Angela Carters "The Werewolf"
"The Werewolf" like "Wolf Alice" and "The Company of Wolves" is a stylisation of the classic Red Riding Hood story. Written by Angela Carter, this narrative once more delves into the depths of death, female identity and pseudo-religious superstition. As one reads the text one cannot help but be inexorably drawn to these themes, therefore it seems only appropriate to focus with near exclusivity upon them.
In life, death is always a factor, the inescapable truth of life is death. And in the "Harsh, brief, poor lives" of these peasants, living in a seemingly desolate "northern country" devoid of even the beauty of nature, where "no flowers grow" the cycle of life is the primal rhythm of nature, but just as nature has abandoned them to the grasp of eternal winter, death has taken and icy hold upon them, where life is hard and death is peace, rest, an escape. A point Carter makes with her oft mentioned "graveyards, those bleak and touching townships of the dead". Even without the contrast of bleak and touching, the imagery invoked here brings to life this barren scene, truly letting the reader glimpse the majestic insanity of these people. All of this of course links in with the idea of bleakness, Carter uses this imagery to give the reader insight into the morbid fascination that corrupts the soul of this land and deadens the heart of its people.
When reading the extract the immediate reaction is one of bleakness and the uninviting landscape. But to truly understand this one has to bring in the idea of cold, not the word. Although the word is repeated numerous times in the text and is once more just another thread of Carters web which binds in the mind the immense misery this land conjures. No here I talk of the idea of cold. A cold that seeps into the bones. Cold hearts, cold minds. A mother who sends her child into the woods in winter in a "shabby coat of sheepskin" armed with a hunting knife. A

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The cold of the Arctic is a major theme and Service uses an assortment of other literary devices to convey his message (Team, Shmoop Editorial). He sets the tone with the oxymoron at the end of the first stanza; “midnight sun” (Service) where midnight speaks to cold and sun to warmth. Then again in the first quatrain he uses a metaphor to tell of how ones “blood runs cold” (Service) in the Arctic. Service employs juxtaposition in the second quatrain when he puts Sam’s home in warm Tennessee “where the cotton blooms and blows” (Service) beside his present residence of the Arctic where “He [is] was always cold” (Service). He utilizes a simile in such a manner that the reader can feel the relentless, penetrating cold “Talk of your cold! through the parka 's fold it stabbed like a driven nail” (Service). His use of personification “heavens scowled” (Service) and “I wrestled with grisly fear” (Service) paints an image of cold so effectively that we can see the dark sky and feel the shiver of fear.…

    • 757 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Descriptions of the land and country in which the characters live sets the scene and the time period of the story. On the first page, we are given images of isolation due to the heavy winter that "buried [the land] under whiteness". This gives us a view into the feudalist lifestyles of the peasants in the mountains, and the "leisure" they enjoyed despite their hard work.…

    • 2921 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As the two young men drive through the desert, Alexie applies significant imagery to show the isolation and importance of the situation. There is a certain tension in the air when the two old friends reconnect after their falling out. They are alone in the middle of nowhere: “Victor looked around the desert, sniffed the air, felt the emptiness and loneliness” (159). Alexie uses imagery to encapsulate the situation that the two young men are in. To help the reader feel the tension of the isolated experience, imagery is used to describe the spacious and lonely desert. As they trudged through Nevada they “had been amazed at the lack of animal life, at the absence of water, of movement” (149). Alexie’s imagery in this particular scene shows us the fog of tension between Victor and Thomas and gives the readers the feeling of tense isolation. As they travel the sixteen-hour-journey back home, they have hours and hours of desert to think about their shared past. The desert is vast and stripped, which forces them to either be deep in thought or forcibly converse with each other. All of this tension is shown through the description of the desert.…

    • 490 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In contrast with this horrible imagery is the description of 'the little villagers' which gives a quite calm and relaxed feeling to the village and the description used sound like a fairy tale where little is repeated to suggest that the villagers lead unimportant lives and begin there days with the same repetitive routines and have 'dreams that rarely amounted to anything' illustrating there lost hope for the future and being stuck in the same small place everyday. This imagery could however suggests that the villagers are like innocent prisoners with no place to go and nothing to look forward to therefore again makes the reader feel uneasy.…

    • 447 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    Carter, Angela. “The Company of Wolves.” Monsters, Edited by Brandy Ball Blake and L. Andrew Cooper. Fountainhead Press, 2012, pp 101-111.…

    • 264 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Coldness is a prominent theme in both Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome and Wallace Stevens' "The Snow Man." When one thinks of coldness, the misery, the emptiness, and the lack of life associated with it also come to mind. Ethan Frome and "The Snowman" show that the coldness of one's surroundings turns one cold and numb on the inside by taking away all feeling and imagination and leaves a person with nothing.…

    • 450 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Winter Break Annotation Assignment: The Cruelest Miles 1. “Allan left behind a vivid description of mushing in a blizzard. On the final ninety-mile stretch to Nome during the sweepstakes, his team was enveloped in ‘air thick as smoke with whirling snow. Gritty as salt it was, and stinging like splinters of steel. It baked into my furs and into the coats of my dogs, until we were encased in snow crusts solid as ice. The din deafened me. I couldn’t hear, couldn’t see, couldn’t breathe. I felt as if the dogs and I were fighting all the devilish elements in the universe.’ Every fifteen minutes, Allan stopped his team and crawled up the gang line, putting a hand on each dog to bury themselves beneath the snow, but every time Allen reached the front of the team, he found the leader, Baldy, ‘sturdy and brave as a little polar bear... a small brave bit of life in that vast, storm-swept waste.... I’d melt the ice away from his face and hug him,’ and then fumble back to the sled. ‘I was so darned proud and happy over that pup I just couldn’t find the words to tell him what I thought of him,’ Allan said. Kaasen too would have trouble finding the words to describe the courage of his own leader, Balto” (Salisbury 221). In this passage, Salisbury uses a plethora of imagery to emphasize the harsh conditions of the arctic. His usage of figurative language, especially similes, such as “gritty as salt” and “thick as smoke” sets the scene so that the reader truly creates the image of an impossible, freezing tundra in their head. The author also bounces back and forth between figurative comparisons and plain, literal language in this excerpt, which creates a thorough understanding for the author’s situation. When Salisbury says the snow was “stinging like splinters of steel,” the reader automatically associates it with immense pain and discomfort; furthermore, when he says he and the dogs were literally "encased in snow crusts” shortly after, it shifts the reader’s mind to a more…

    • 4564 Words
    • 19 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the novel, the Valley of Ashes symbolizes poverty and hopelessness. The Valley of the Ashes…

    • 620 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In complete contrast with the reality of the poem’s setting, the touch of snow is equated with an image of lying under a blossom-laden tree in England. The home fires contain glowing coals described as ‘crusted dark-red jewels’, this actually signifies a dying fire, a symbol of people’s waning interest in the fate of the exposed soldiers. That the ‘doors are all closed: on us’ is also symbolic, representing the total loss of the memory of the men and that…

    • 874 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The author draws attention to this idea”Shreve High football stadium,” (). When thinking of Tiltonsville, the narrator comments that he/she thinks of “...Polacks nursing long beers…” (). The diction of the sentence delivers an expanded understanding of the people the narrator is considering. For example, the are “nursing” the beer, giving rise to the idea of self-medication. The idea of “nursing” the beer also nods to the notion that they are taking their time, and saving every drop in order to save money. Therefore, the activity of drinking is a way for these people to escape or aid their bleak lives, yet they still lack the resources to sufficiently do so. With the next town, Benwood, the narrator considers the “...gray faces of Negroes in the blast furnace…”(). By turning from escapist activity to a job, the author draws focus to the conditions of their livelihood. The monochromatic display of “gray faces” is telling to the tired lives of these individuals. The lack of color on their faces, presumably due to soot, figuratively demonstrates that their lives also lack color. Thus, their jobs take away a vivacity of spirit making them empty souls trucking on with the day to day. In the last town of Wheeling Steel the narrator describes a specific individual, a “ruptured night watchman” (). At first glance, the adjective ruptured doesn’t appear to fit with describing the individual, however, picking apart the idea that the night watchman is one watching time leads to a notion that time is broken, and there is no end to the night. Symbolically, the idea of broken time contributes to the overall idea that poverty is neverending and cyclical. Lastly, the narrator states that all the individuals described are “dreaming of heroes.” () The word choice of “dreaming” is further indicative of the idea of mental escapism, because real escapism…

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Once upon a time, there was a girl known as Little Red Riding Hood and she recently got in a fight with her mother! What happened was that Little Red Riding Hood ate her mother’s pie without her mother’s consent. The pie was for Little Red Riding Hood’s grandmother, as it was for her birthday today. After Little Red Riding Hood and her mother argued, Little Red Riding Hood decided to go to her grandmother’s for the rest of the weekend. She packed her doll and set out on the long walk to her grandmother’s home, which the only path to it is through the Dark Forest. Just after leaving she forgot the dangers of the forest and remembered that there was a legend of the Big Bad Wolf.…

    • 341 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Finally, the poem has a rural setting. The poet chooses to use a rural setting to show a deeper side of the actual poem itself. It shows that the life of a farmer isn't always easy. The power of the words and the surroundings was amazing it really made the reader think about their life.…

    • 338 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The imagery statement “frost will fasten on mud and us” leads the reader to infer how horrifying the feeling of the frost slowly coating the soldiers must have been (Owen Stanza 8 Line 1). The soldiers are beginning to get frostbite from being outside in the freezing winter for far too long. Many people believe that most deaths of soldiers come from enemy inflicted wounds, but some are not. In the Civil War, 620,000 soldiers died, but of those poor souls that died, two thirds of the soldiers were killed by means not relating to war. The term “ice” refers to the look in the eyes of the soldiers as they saw their fallen comrades (Owen Stanza 8, Line 4). The soldiers are so used to death, they are starting to become used to it. This is also a reference to the elements of nature that the soldiers are constantly struggling against. Soldiers often come home as changed humans from the amount of emotional torture they must endure during their services. When soldiers serve their duties that are similar to prison sentences, they are changed. Physically they will heal, but emotionally, most soldiers will struggle until the end of their…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Zora Neale Hurston

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages

    At the beginning of this piece, we are quickly introduced to the different lifestyles between the farm she lived in and the one she encountered when she left to New York. Easily distinguished is the contrast made by the use of the word "folks" when she mentions her relatives from "down under" but calls the New Yorkers "people." The North is seen as a literature archetype as an unknown lucrative place, a strange place where "the flowers cost a dollar each." This is positioned as a welcome mat to a world of differences between these two environments, which leads us to the core of her childhood life.…

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Through foreshadowing, death is shown to the reader on the family’s drive to Florida. “Outside of Toombsbaro she woke up and recalled an old plantation...” (O’Connor 370). The word Toombsbaro in the story is just a towns name, but if the word is broken down, it sounds a lot like “tomb”. A tomb is a burial chamber, or a house for the dead. The author makes up this name for a town to foreshadow that death is coming. Also, while the family is driving on the road, "They pass a large cotton field with five or six graves fenced in the middle of it, like a small island.”(368). When the family sees the graves, they do not realize that that will be them in the ground soon. The family also has six people in it and there were six graves. This is just one of the images that the family seems that is really their own destiny. According to Alex Link in his article “Means, Meaning and Meditated Space in A Good Man is Hard to Find.” he explains that O’Connor uses landmarks such as grave yards, so relate to the reader. So it is easier for us to understand that she is relating landmarks that we all know, to death. Death is still being foreshadowed once the family gets into a car wreck on the way to the plantation. The car landed in a ditch but ...”behind the ditch they were sitting in there were more woods, tall dark and deep.” (O’Connor 372). The woods represent death, and that it is getting close. The family is…

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics