Smith's Novel A Tree Grows In Brooklyn example essay topic
The entire story revolves around Francie and the Nolan family, including her brother Neelie, her mother Katie and her father Johnny. An ensemble of high relief characters aids and abets them in their journey through this story of sometimes bleak survival and everlasting hope. As we find out, the struggle for survival is primarily focused against the antagonist of this story, the hard-grinding poverty afflicting Francie, the Nolan's and Brooklyn itself. The hope in the novel is shown symbolically in the "The "Tree of Heaven"". A symbol used throughout the novel to show hope, perseverance and to highlight other key points.
Although the author, Betty Smith, denied ever writing a novel with socially political motives, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn abounds with references to class issues. Nearly every scene, every character illustrates or deals with the problem of poverty in early twentieth-century America. For the Nolan's, being poor means they must always think about being poor - how they will buy the next load of coal, where their food will come from, their insurance, rent, medicine, all the necessities of raising a family. The novel also shows that poverty is not just the absence of food or comfort, it is the direct cause for Uncle F littman to leave, Johnny's utter nothingness and Francie's inability to go to a high school. Every action in the novel is based around a limited amount of resources, as not only the Nolan's but also the entire community suffers. Exploitation abounds, whether in the overpriced sale of candy, child labour in metal collection, dishonest grocers and butchers and employers with impunity to set their own rules.
Katie does her best with the household money, and we find that for the poor sometimes a luxury isn't in getting something, but in being able to waste it". 'Francie is entitled to one cup each meal like the rest. If it makes her feel better to throw it way rather than to drink it, all right. I think it's good that people like us can waste something once in a while and get the feeling of how it would be have lots of money and not have to worry about scrounging. ' (pg 16) While that makes Katie sound sweet, she also sent both children to get their vaccinations, alone. In her mind, it was a necessity, as the children had to learn what it was to grow up in a cruel world - and be able to defend themselves. "Yet, they had to be vaccinated.
Her being with them or somewhere else couldn't take that fact away. So why shouldn't one of the three of them be spared? Besides, she said to her conscience, it's a hard and bitter world. They " ve got to live in it. Let them get hardened young to take care of themselves". (pg 127) Smith shows a sympathetic side to all her characters, illustrating that poverty is a condition unto itself, and in hard times most people need to think of themselves and their families first - before thinking of others. We constantly see the class contrast when there is interaction with characters from higher classes.
The doctor, who is wealthy, is portrayed as a mean-minded snobbish person in the book, a charity event is revealed as a con game, the baker sells stale bread and wealthier people are automatically viewed with suspicion; the most endearing characters in the story are depicted in poverty. Toward the end of the book Francie reveals the character building of her experiences with poverty, as she and Neelie ponder the differences their sister Laurie will have growing up in better circumstances than they did."Laurie's going to have a mighty easy life all right" "Annie Laurie McShane! She " ll never have the hard times we had, will she?"No. And she " ll never have the fun we had, either."Gosh! We did have fun, didn't we Neelie?"Yeah!"Poor Laurie", said Francie pityingly. (pg 413-414) The beginning of the story describes Francie's neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York, called Williamsburg. Throughout the neighborhood grows a kind of tree called the " "Tree of Heaven" " since it grows wherever it's seeds land - in vacant lots, garbage piles, and cracks in cement.
It only grows in the tenement districts, where the poor people live. "The one tree in Francie's yard was neither a pine nor a hemlock. It had pointed leaves which grew along green switches which radiated from the bough and made a tree which looked like a lot of opened green umbrellas. Some people called it the "Tree of Heaven". No matter where its seed fell, it made a tree which struggled to reach the sky. It grew in boarded-up lots and out of neglected rubbish heaps and it was the only tree that grew out of cement.
It grew lushly, but only in the tenement districts". (pg 7) When Francie is born a weak and sickly baby, and when her mothers milk runs out the local midwife tells her it is a curse. After she finds out that the real reason is another impending pregnancy, Katie later tells her pitying neighbours that her child will live, and will grow strong by comparing her to the "Tree of Heaven". "Don't say that", Katie held her baby tightly. "It's not better to die.
Who wants to die? Everything struggles to live. Look at that tree growing up over there out of that grating. It gets no sun, and water only when it rains. It's growing out of sour earth. And it's strong because its hard struggle to live is making it strong.
My children will be strong that way". (pg 86) In Brooklyn, this tree trumps all others. Francie sees the "Tree of Heaven" every single day; it is a touch of beauty in her surroundings, yet it is nothing but an ordinary tree. In a conventional sense the tree isn't special, it grows everywhere where there are poor people. It is not grandiose like the sea or majestic like a mountain. It is humble, and its humility makes it all the more powerful. When Francie and the Nolans move to a new home in Williamsburg, the first thing that is described, is the tree in the yard.
Not the original "Tree of Heaven", yet the same type of tree, as if it is following the Nolans. "The high narrow kitchen faced on the yard which was a flagstone walk surrounding a square of cement-like sour earth out of which nothing could possibly grow. Yet, there was this tree growing in the year. When Francie first saw it, it was only up to the second story. She could look down on it from her window. It looked like a packed crowd of people of assorted sizes, standing umbrella protected in the rain". (pg 112) When Francie and Neely try to plant a spruce tree, they watch it die even as they take care of it.
But the "Tree of Heaven" keeps on. When Francie leaves Brooklyn at the end of the book, six years later, she notices that the tree is still there, although the house is now lived in by a girl named F lorrie". the tree whose leaf umbrellas had curled around, under and over her fire escape had been cut down because the housewives complained that wash on the lines got entangled in its branches. The landlord had sent two men and they had chopped it down. But the tree hadn't died... it hadn't died.
A new tree had grown from the stump and its trunk had grown along the ground until it reached a place where there were no wash lines above it. Then it had started to grow towards the sky again... This tree that men had chopped down... this tree men had built a bonfire around, trying to burn up its stump - this tree lived!" (pg 430) The tree represents hope in the midst of hardship. It symbolizes the people in this Brooklyn neighborhood, and the fact that the tree also grows in Francie's front yard, suggests that it represents her life as well. Just as the tree can grow strong deplete of soil or light - Francie will grow up strong despite few advantages in her life.
In A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, we are thrown into a world of deprived downtrodden people, who battle bitterly against poverty and hardship. We are also shown that in the middle of this depressing world, there is still hope and perseverance towards a better future. Like the tree, the author seems to be saying, she 'likes poor people". We are shown through the continual use of the "Tree of Heaven" as a symbol, that it is possible for one to overcome their environment, their surroundings, to endure the deprivation and the hardship, and still grow up to be a good person, with a good life, regardless.