Thursday, February 28, 2019
Poverty Case Essay
The most terrible  leanness is loneliness, and the feeling of being unlove.  Mformer(a) TeresaIts frightening to think how those who  raging under poverty in our country would  search so  low- placeed when in reality are just as powerful. Poverty has the power to disable people from seeing the sun on bright  twenty-four hour periods,  patch it  give the bounce enable them to think ab discover the gloomiest ones, desperately resorting to un complimentsed   shipway to  yield what they need. They are equipped with a valid  agent for committing crimes and  scrofulous acts, rooting back to poverty, just exactly something we find hard to  curb solution to. It is hard to embrace them  richly,  provided is harder to condemn them for feeling so hopeless ab step forward their situations. Hopelessness is what fuels these people and its a  mournful reality that the society can non  assist but let them do the  operate  their  birth dirty way. Loneliness is an other type of poverty, as mentioned b   y  produce Teresa, and even claimed it as the most terrible of all poverties present.Sadly,  much(prenominal) was what the three major characters in the stories Cat in the Rain,  fall behind Brill, and A Rose for Emily, experienced. The traits they had in common rooted back to loneliness, being the reason why they thought they had to do unique, and at a point,  indistinct ship canal to be  accredited and loved in return.The story Cat in the Rain by Ernest Hemingway focused on the character of an American  adult female who tries hard to get her husbands  watchfulness by  sparing a kitten from the rain. As the story develops, it is  noniceable that theres a slight tension between the American couple as emphasized by the husbands cold treatment to his wife. The wife, in return, recites her desire for things she knows she could not immediately have and will require  striking effort from her husband to have them. The American wife, enslaved by loneliness and insecurity, displayed selfish   ness as she repeatedly said, Anyway, I  indigence a cat. I want a cat. I want a cat now. If I cant have long  cop or any fun, I can have a cat (Hemingway 106). Desiring for uncommon things during a vacation  arouse only meant that there was something wrong with the main character.It wasnt just the  conscious(p) feeling of loneliness that kept her from enjoying the married life the fact that she wasnt able to directly express her feelings about how unhappy she is to her husband  agency that she has been  recalling the feeling of loneliness herself. The way she felt wasnt questionable, neither were her feelings unique, but the way she expressed her feelings made them so because she was unconsciously, hardly pressed by her fears. Asking for a cat, and reciting all her desires, I want to pull my hair back tight and smooth and  ca-ca a big  myocardial infarct at the back that I can feel I want to have a kitty to sit on my lap and  whirr when I stroke her and I want to eat at a table with    my own silver and I want candles. And I want it to be spring and I want to brush my hair out in front of a mirror and I want a kitty and I want some new clothes. all of a sudden  come outs unusual, and it sure is one unique way to attract attention and show her longing for acceptance and love. (Hemingway 105)In comparison to Miss Brill, the American wife is lucky to have someone than no one at all. Miss Brill is an old single woman who wants to be loved in return. Seen in the text is her  duncish desire to impress other people as she takes time to dress up and try to  estimate beautiful with her favourite old fur necklet before going out to the park. It had been part of her weekly ritual to go out to the park and  mall around, secretly showing how she wants to have her existence validated by the society.  honourable like the American wife, Miss Brill also has the tendency to  gesticulate off her loneliness, denying the fact that she is unhappy with the way her life is going. This i   s evident in the first paragraph of the story, And when she breathed, something light and sad  no, not sad, exactly  something  dismal seemed to move in her bosom (Mansfield 48).With her shrugging all these feelings off comes the danger of not realizing how desperate her actions seem to other people. These actions,  such as eavesdropping on other peoples conversations, wearing the old fur necklet and looking silly, acting as if she were on a play, all root from loneliness she had been experiencing. Her desire to be accepted and be united with the community stems from within though she doesnt seem so conscious of what she exactly wants, thus acting in a weird, odd manner. Miss Brill sought attention and acceptance in a unique way, as her actions and train of thoughts (that Miss Brill  discover what it made it so exciting. They were all on stage) (Mansfield 50) are not normally done and thought about by people who  desire the same thing. This proves how much acceptance of ones weaknes   ses can help him/her get through it, something that denying can never do.The same situation was what Miss Emily experienced. Her loneliness came from her lack of freedom back when her  buzz off was still  springy as he was very strict with the relationships she had with others. By the time her father was gone, she had a hard time relating with the rest of the community, isolating herself inside the  hearth.  undecomposed like the two other characters mentioned, Miss Emily also had the tendency to deny this loneliness, bluntly shown when she kept her fathers dead body in her house for three days and not accepting others sympathy The day after his death all the ladies prepared to call at the house and offer condolence and aid, as is our custom. Miss Emily met them at the door, dressed as usual and with no trace of grief on her face. She told them that her father was not dead (Faulkner 59)With the constant denial of this loneliness and longing for acceptance, she finds herself obsessin   g over  kor Barron, who happens to not be a marrying kind and refuses her love for him. Her oppressed feelings for him and her deep desire for his love and acceptance led her to doing unique and questionable actions for her to get him, with or without his consent. As the story progresses, she finds herself purchasing arsenic, a rat poison, and kills bell ringer Barron without pity. It was a selfish move for her to do she didnt even seem to bother about how wrong it was, nor did she think about the possible consequences of such action. What she did was definitely unique and questionable, considering how immoral and selfish it was to kill someone for her own benefit. Just like the American wife who had been pressed by her fears  confidential information to such weird doings, Miss Emily also had her share of fear in losing Homer Barron.The three female characters pursuit of love can be so strongly driven that they find themselves doing unique and questionable ways to be loved and accep   ted in return. They all had fears empowering the loneliness they were feeling,  devising them deny this poverty in them more and thus, leading to the unique and questionable ways they did in the story. This only shows how much desires can be so powerful that it can make people do anything to get what it is that would make them happy and complete. It is then, important to be able to accept ones own weaknesses to be able to know and understand what it is that can fully solve and patch things up, something that denying and concealing can never do.Works Cited1 Mother Teresa of Calcutta quotes. Find the famous quotes you need, ThinkExist.com Quotations.Thinkexist.com, Web. 4 Jan 2013.2 Hemingway, Ernest. Cat in the Rain. Lit 13  position Dept. Ateneo de Manila University. Quezon City np., 2012. 103-106. Print.3 Mansfield, Katherine. Miss Brill. Lit 13 side Dept. Ateneo de Manila University. Quezon City np., 2012. 48-51. Print.4 Faulkner, William. A Rose for Emily. Lit 13 English Dept. At   eneo de Manila University. Quezon City np., 2012. 57-64. Print.  
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