WELCOME STUDENTS!
This is a place for us to discuss openly and honestly the literature we are reading. Here we are all just communicating our thoughts on what we are reading. There are no right and wrong answers. However, you are expected to be polite, mature, and on topic.
Monday, October 12, 2009
Voices from Beyond...
Edgar Lee Master's Spoon River Anthology is a collection of the epitaphs of the residents of Spoon River. Read through the anthology. Select an epitaph that you found especially thought-provoking. Give us the title/speaker. Briefly tell what it about and explain how and what it make you think and why you think others should read it. Also tell us the page of the epitaph so that we can locate it. (This post closes at midnight on Thursday, October 15th).
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
My personal favorite is "Mrs. Kessler" because its message is very easy to understand and connect to real life. In this epitaph, Mrs. Kessler reveals that she supported her family as a laundress because her husband, a veteran, was too preoccupied with politics to supplement his monthly pension of six dollars. During her time as a laundress, she learned "the secrets of all the people/ From their curtains, counterpanes, shirts and skirts." In other words, she could see the true image of people through their clothing and linens, despite the false image that they may advertise in the town. Through her use of extended metaphor, Mrs. Kessler is able to effectively compare life and reputations to clothing. I found this comparison to be quite clever. I was surprised by the reality in her epitaph as she accurately profiles people in her town, not to mention my own town. I think others should read this epitaph because it reveals that the truth cannot be hidden. Though some people try to hide the truth, there is always some outlet by which it will be exposed. In this case, the truth is revealed with each stain and tear in the people's laundry. If anyone would like to read Mrs. Kessler's epitaph, it is located on page 99 in SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY.
BS-0
Nellie Clark’s epitaph (on page 48) tells of two tragedies. At the tender age of eight, Nellie was raped by her teenage neighbor, scarring her and hindering her happiness. When she finally married at age thirty-five, Nellie’s husband found out and decided that he was “cheated” out of a virgin bride, so he deserted Nellie, and she died the next winter. This epitaph deeply affected me, because it tells of situations that were completely out of Nellie’s control, yet she was blamed for them. It made me realize how much the action of another can affect someone—it ruined Nellie’s entire life, even her death, which was in winter when all the hope seems gone from the world. What really stunned me was the fact that the entire village turned on Nellie and sided with her husband, even though she was innocent. Others should read Nellie Clark’s story because it is a moving epitaph and provokes thought about society and righteousness as a whole.
JJ-0
Post a Comment