There is More to Life

705 Words2 Pages

The narrative “The Chrysanthemums”, written by John Steinbeck, is a short story about a couple living in Sinas Valley. It follows the experience of Elisa Allen one winter day, and describes her life should as a farmer’s wife. The setting is placed in the past after cars were invented, but still back when caravans were not uncommon. Her becomes interested in the thought of living an independent life after talking to a man about his life traveling in a caravan. While she is intrigued by the thought of living in a caravan, she is held back by the thought that it is no life for a woman (851). This story illustrates the way that society assigns value to people depending on their gender roles, and how people can be held back from discovering their true potential because of the limits that society gives them.
This theme is illustrated in this story from the very beginning when the author describes Elisa Allen. Her strength and ambition is shown in her facial features and her abilities when Steinbeck explains, “Her face was eager and handsome; even her work with the scissors was overeager, overpowerful. The chrysanthemum stems seemed too small and easy for her energy” (847). Her face was eager for work and challenges, and the small task of cutting the chrysanthemum stems was too simple for her ambition. Given that her work was overeager and overpowerful, it is apparent that she was filled with energy for stronger things. However, she was stuck doing simple things such as gardening because she was a woman. She couldn’t go out and manage the farm like her husband because she was considered fragile. Later on in the piece she speaks indirectly about what is acceptable for her, as a woman, to be interested in when her husband jokingly sugges...

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...h him, saying that it is a good way to describe the chrysanthemums (849), showing that she knows what place she holds in society. By the tinker’s interest and praise of her chrysanthemums, she feels that she too is being praised and appreciated for once. This gives her a boost of self-confidence following their encounter, enabling her to put a great amount of effort into looking good for the movie with her husband (851-852). Consequently, when she sees the chrysanthemum that she gave the tinker thrown on the side of the road carelessly, she weeps, knowing that his view of women has not changed and remains just as ignorant as before (852). For once, she thought she was understood by a man, and that he could see the magnificence of what she was capable of doing. However, she was crushed when she saw herself thrown on the side of the road, just as insignificant as ever.

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