Themes In Stephen Crane's The Bride Comes To Yellow Sky

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The Wild, Wild West

The central theme of Stephen Crane 's The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky is the West 's loss of its traditional rough-hewn character due to the steady encroachment of Eastern Culture (and soft Eastern attitudes). In that sense the most important aspects of setting are the train that is taking Jack and his new bride back to Yellow Sky, and the town itself, which itself has already begun to symbolizes those changes.
The setting actually serves two purposes, initially to establish a sense of Eastern style and then to knock it down by contrast with the authenticity of the West. The story opens with the newlyweds on board the train headed west towards the town of Yellow Sky. Though located in remote western, Yellow Sky can be reached by train, which serves as a literal and …show more content…

Here too, we are told that Scratchy is "the last one of the old gang that used to hang out along the river here.”(339). Once again this is pattern for the end of an era, when gunslingers roamed the plains and men like Jack were counted on to forgo love and marriage in order to keep the peace. But we learn that even old Scratchy himself has been corrupted. He wears fancified Eastern clothing sewn in part by “Jewish women” back in New York. He even wears red-topped boots with gilded imprints Crane compares to those worn by "little sledding boys on the hillsides of New England."(340).We then see Scratchy looking for Jack and screaming at Jack 's empty house. The emptiness of the house symbolizes the hollowness of Jack himself. Crane builds tension to an inevitable gun fight but no such gunfight occurs. It is a build-up to nothing...a build-up to a letdown that feels a little bit like a sex scene without the sex. Of course, the lack of a gunfight further symbolizes the changing, increasingly civilized

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