Direct Foreshadowing Of The Grandmother's Death example essay topic
As readers, we know that O'Connor will not mention such an interesting fact without having it affect the characters later on in the story. The morning of the trip the grandmother is the first one in the car ready to travel as June Star predicted she would be, "She wouldn't stay at home for a million bucks. She has to go everywhere we go. ' This can be read as a direct foreshadowing of the grandmother's death. As one reads the story, one wonders why every time Bobby Lee and Hiram take someone into the forest, they never come back. Eventually, the whole family is taken to die.
June Star's comment that the grandmother goes everywhere the family goes can be read as an indication that she will meet the same end that they did. Although the grandmother did not want to go to Florida, she ironically dresses in her Sunday best. She was dressed very nicely with: a navy blue straw sailor hat with a bunch of white violets on the brim and a savvy blue dress with a small white dots in the print. Her collars and cuffs were white organdy trimmed with lace and at her neckline she had pinned a purple spray of cloth violets containing a sachet. A strong foreshadowing imagery can be read into these lines. Knowing the definite ending of the story, the grandmother's elaborate dress symbolizes a preparation for her coffin.
When a person dies, they usually are dressed in their best outfit, just like the grandmother was dressed in what seemed to be her Sunday best. A stronger foreshadowing is when O'Connor states the reason for the grandmother's immaculate dress, "in case of an accident, anyone seeing her dead on the highway would know at once that she was a lady. ' She herself predicts her own death. Unfortunately, she doesn't know this yet. Although this is beyond the parameters of this essay, it is interesting that in the grandmother's mind wearing her best clothes prevent any misgivings about her status as a lady IF she was to die. But as the Misfit later points out, "there never was a body that gave the undertaker a tip.
' The grandmother's perceived readiness for death is a stark contrast to her behavior when she encounters the Misfit; for she shows herself to be the least prepared for death. As the trip progresses, the children reveal themselves as funny, spoiled brats. O'Connor's desire to illustrate the lost respect for the family and elders among the young is quite apparent in her illustrations of the children. One evidently notices another foreshadowing image when the family "passed by a cotton field with five or six graves fenced in the middle of it, like a small island. ' It is not an accident that the number of graves "five or six' matches the exact number of people in the car. There are 5 people and a baby.
Furthermore, this particular foreshadowing image leads directly into the next one: "Look at the graveyard!' the grandmother said, pointing it out. "That was the old family burying ground. That belonged to the plantation. ' "Where's the plantation?' John Wesley asked. "Gone With the Wind,' said the grandmother. "Ha.
Ha. ' The grandmother's reference to the plantation as "gone with the wind' can be seen as an image symbolizing the family's state at the end of the story. Their souls are "gone with the wind' as well upon death. It is almost comical how O'Connor sets her readers up for the ending of the story. For example, the name of the town where the Misfit kills them is "Toombs boro. ' Another quite interesting imagery is when the grandmother asks the Misfit, "What did you do to get sent to the penitentiary that first time?' (130).
His answer further foreshadows the death of the family. He says", ' Turn to the right, it was a wall, looking up again at the cloudless sky. Turn to the left, it was a wall. Look up it was a ceiling, look down it was a floor'. ' This description, although used for a jail cell, it could also apply to a tight grave. Wherever a soul looks, they will see a wall, indicating where the family will be once the Misfit is finished with them.
Another foreshadowing image is shown in the Misfit and the grandmother's conversation towards the end. He says "Does it seem right to you, lady, that one is punished a heap and another ain't punished at all?' As readers, we can see that the Misfit will kill the grandmother. After all she "ain't punished' for her crimes of hypocrisy, self-centered ness, and lying. As shown later on in the essay, the Misfit plays God and inflicts punishment where he deems necessary. The grandmother iterates in her conversation with the Misfit the importance of prayer. Her emphasis on the importance of prayer symbolizes her realization of death.
It is a common Christian practice for a priest to spend the last hours of a dying person's life with them. The Misfit in representing the angered priest, or even Jesus–' It was the same case with Him [Jesus] as with me except He hadn't committed any crime and they could prove I had committed one' he plays judge, jury and executioner to the grandmother. A Good Man I hard To Find, is consistent with O'Connor's view that contemporary society was drastically changing for the worse. O'Connor's obvious displeasure with society at the time has often been attributed to her catholic religion, her studies in the social science field, and the fact that the celebrated lifestyles of the elite southern whites were gone.
The grandmother represents godliness and holiness. The parents pay little attention to the grandmother and when they do it is often rude. The unruly children are represent the breakdown of respect, and discipline, and are consequently a forecast of future generations. The Misfit represents evil.
At one point comparing himself to Christ. Flannery O'Connor uses strong imagery to foreshadow to her readers the inevitable ending of "A Good Man Is Hard To Find. ' She first gives her readers an inkling of the ending by mentioning the Misfit's murderous tendencies, peaking her readers curiosity. She then uses numerous images such as the grandmother's dress, the graveyard, and the conversation with the Misfit to further feed our curiosity. Her foreshadowing images are both strong and obscure, so as not to spoil the surprising ending of the story..