Thursday, July 18, 2019
Elizabeth Gaskell Essay
After Helen died things didnââ¬â¢t get much better. The farm workers started to look down upon him and ââ¬Ëhardy waited till my fatherââ¬â¢s back was turned rated the stepsonââ¬â¢, even his own brother looks down upon him unintentionally ââ¬ËI sometimes repeated the disparaging words I heardâ⬠¦ Without fully understanding their meaningââ¬â¢. This makes us feel a lot of sympathy towards Gregory and we feel sorry for him. There seems to be a close link between Gregory life and his Mother life. No matter what happens, they try to make the best of things and get on with it. Preston maintains and feeds his hatred of Gregory instead of repressing it; he ââ¬Ëcherished his feeling of alienationââ¬â¢ he had from Gregory. He lived the save type of life as her, one of suffering and one full of sorrow, death seems like a better place for him he is along side the one and only person who loved him. Preston holds a grudge on Gregory right from the very start. But we must admire Gregory for not begrudging him or any other person who treats him badly even if they have just been nasty to him, he would ââ¬Ëdo a kind turn for anyone, even if they had been scolding himââ¬â¢. He is parallel to his mother. This helps us to warm to him as a character. Gregory is stoical and endures things with uncomplaining patience whichââ¬â¢s helps us to admire him. Gaskell creates a character that speaks highly of Gregory. Nearly every one of the farm workers has a bad thing to say about him apart from old Adam. Gregory is sent out onto the hills as a Shepard with along with Adam who trains him. Adam is the only person apart from Gregoryââ¬â¢s mother who has not got a bad word to say about him, but indeed praises him. This is likely to the fact that Adam was ââ¬Ëalmost the first person who had a good opinion of Gregoryââ¬â¢ and even told this to his boss, Preston. Later in the story when the narrator goes missing, Gregory goes out in the thick snow to look for his half brother risking in his own life and not even thinking about it. This also seems parallel to Helen who had done similar for Gregory by putting Gregory first and looking out for him without even thinking about it. When Gregory manages to find the narrator, Gaskell makes us feel even more admiration for him. In the freezing snow, he gives his brother the Maud (woollen shawl) that he is wearing so that the narrator can stay just a little bit warmer. This makes us warm to Gregory, because of the fact he is suffering for the sake of his brother. Gaskell evokes admiration from the readers, Gregory died for his brother, and someone he barely knew and did not even complain about it. Gaskell creates a character that many of the readers may take a disliking to and manages to get ambivalent responses from the readers. Preston is described as being ââ¬Ëan old bachelorâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ¦Ã¢â¬ ¦ long past fortyââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëone of the wealthiest farmers thereaboutsâ⬠. Helen agrees to marry him solely on that the fact that he ââ¬Ëpromised to take good charge of her boy, and let him want for nothing, neither in way of keep nor in educationââ¬â¢. This almost seems a purely business agreement. He uses Gregory as an excuse in order to marry Helen. Gaskell makes our response to Preston more complex than any other of the characters; she manages to get a complicated reaction to Preston through a short story. With the other main characters, it is obvious how Gaskell is trying to portray them but it is not obvious in Prestons case. We are suspicious of him at the start. At the start of ââ¬Å"The Half Brothersâ⬠Preston is made out to be a horrible man, but by the end of the story our feelings have softened against him. He is very impatient, he does not wait for Helen to love him ââ¬ËPerhaps love would have come in timeââ¬â¢. Preston begrudges Gregory as child for the attention he receives from Helen. He is jealous of him, and cannot stand Helen loving Gregory more than him. Preston is dehumanised. He does not love Gregory at all, but hates him. But later on we see that Preston is humanised, ââ¬Ëglad and proud his son was bornââ¬â¢. He becomes ââ¬Ësorry for his poor wifeââ¬â¢s stateââ¬â¢, but still blames it on Gregory and holds him responsible for Helens death even though it is his own fault for arguing with her. After Helens death Preston honours the agreement for which they were married under, to look after Gregory. But he makes no attempt to love him, only to give him material things that money can buy, nothing emotional. Even Preston is hurting Gregoryââ¬â¢s dog, just because it belongs to Gregory, he has a real dislike to anything that Gregory owns or anything to do with. Even Prestonââ¬â¢s own son thinks he is to hard on Gregory ââ¬ËI believe that my father cherished his feeling of alienation to my brother as a duty, than strove to repress itââ¬â¢ But towards the end of ââ¬Å"The Half brothersâ⬠Gaskell makes us feel differently towards him. There is a sense of deep regret from Preston on his deathbed about the way that he treated Gregory throughout his life ââ¬Å"God forgive me my hardness of heart towards the fatherless child! â⬠After his death he knows that Helen loved Gregory more and so as a sign of repentance had ââ¬Ëdesired that he might lie at the foot of the grave, in which, by his desire, poor Gregory had been laid with our mother. ââ¬Ë Preston is very grateful and thankful to Gregory for saving his sons life ââ¬Å"I would have given him half my landâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ¦Ã¢â¬ ¦ I would have blessed him as my sonâ⬠. He even tries to be kind to the dog, but it wonââ¬â¢t let him near it. Gaskell is very good at creating and holding suspense for long periods of time through the story. At the start of the story, just after Helenââ¬â¢s husband dies suspense starts to build up as we become worried about Helenââ¬â¢s future and continues to hold the suspense until she marries Preston. When the narrators gets lost, the fact that ââ¬Ënight came on quickerââ¬â¢ makes us feel unnerved that night is overtaking him and that he may get stuck there all night. An eerie atmosphere is created which intensifies the suspense even further ââ¬Ësome wild boggy moorâ⬠¦ ââ¬Ë Tautology is used to emphasis how dark it and adds to the suspense ââ¬Ënoiseless expansion of black darknessââ¬â¢. Gaskellââ¬â¢s use of language also helps to create suspense. ââ¬ËSuddenly the air was filledâ⬠¦ ââ¬Ë, suddenly is placed at the beginning of the sentence to show how quickly and unexpectedly the snow fell. We start to become worried for the narrator and the suspense is built up even further by the emotional language used ââ¬ËI shouted ââ¬â terrible, wild shouts for bare lifeââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëchoked with tearsâ⬠¦ desolate, helpless death I was to dieââ¬â¢ ââ¬â shows how extreme the situation is, how isolated and lonely the narrator must have felt. The narrator starts to give up hope and we start to feel very sorry for him and then just as all hope is gone, lassie comes to his rescue, we now see that he saved and is going to get home safely as he has been found. Just as soon as we feel relief that he has been found, there poses as even bigger problem, instead of one person being lost, there are two ââ¬â the suspense is deepened even further than before. As the two try to find their way home, it is apparent that they are not going to get home and could die out there. All of this creates suspense and makes the reader want to read on to see if the pair gets home all right. The suspense reaches it climax near the end of the story. When the narrator determined to sleep and doesnââ¬â¢t care if he dies. When the pair realise that they can go no further, they stop as a last resort ââ¬â they know that they are going to die and sent lassie back to get help. The suspense is mounted to see whether or not lassie can get back to the ranch before the pair die of the cold. Then the narrator ââ¬Ëfell asleepââ¬â¢. We think is the end, he has fallen asleep he will die. But then a sense of relief comes over us when we find that the narrator has been found just time and survives, but Gregory is not so lucky. Through out the story ââ¬Å"The Half Brothersâ⬠Gaskell evokes and manipulates many of our feelings. But some readers, including myself find that some of the story mawkish and trying to push at our emotional buttons in an unsophisticated way. Gaskell style of writing helps to manipulate our feelings. The way she portrays Helenââ¬â¢s and Gregoryââ¬â¢s lives makes us feel a lot of sympathy towards them but we admire the way they put up with everything without complaining. She creates a character, which seems to be the bad guy of the story and evokes complex feelings for him from us. Some readers including myself may find that Preston is an horrid man and continue to think the same even when Gaskell tries to soften his image by saying that he has become ââ¬Ëhumanisedââ¬â¢, but others may feel that he is a good man at heart and this is portrayed at the end of the story when he is deeply regretful. Gaskell is very good at creating suspense and makes us worried about the characters and makes us want to read on. So overall Gaskell is very good at manipulating our feelings.
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