Sun Moon And Talia

647 Words2 Pages

“Little Glass Slipper” by Charles Perrault is a story about Cinderella; a beautiful and kind woman that constantly gets abuse by her stepsisters and stepmother. Eventually she gets the chance to go to a ball with the help of her godmother. Everyone, specifically the prince, is amazed at how beautiful she is that he instantly falls in love with her. Similarly, in “Sun, Moon, and Talia” by Giambattista Basile, Talia is also describe as a beautiful and kind woman. So beautiful, in fact, that the king has sex with her unconscious body. When Talia wakes up she is delighted at the fact that she has children and eventually the king and her end up living happily ever after. In both of these fairy tales beauty is a positive, in improving the heroine’s …show more content…

Perrault describes Cinderella as “a young [lady]...of… unparalleled goodness and sweetness of temper” (1). As a result, her stepmother cannot help but compare herself, who is “the…most haughty women [stepmother] that was ever seen” (Perrault 1), to Cinderella and the stepmother sees how much better a person Cinderella is than herself. As a result she lashes out by mistreating Cinderella. Cinderella’s sisters, who are “exactly like her [stepmother]” (Perrault 1), also react in a similar fashion, yet Cinderella never fights back; She never complains or acts in any way, shape, or form that would be unbefitting of a lady, which further causes her stepsisters and her stepmother’s irritation and envy towards her to …show more content…

In Perrault’s “Cinderella” the first statement that anyone says at the ball is, “How beautiful she is! How beautiful she is!” (3). This person (who has no name in the story) feels the need to compliment her beauty twice instead of asking who she is or why she came alone to the ball. Furthermore the idea that beauty is power is further reinforce in the following line: “There was immediately a profound silence. Everyone stopped dancing, and the violins ceased to pay, so entranced was everyone with the singular beauties of the unknown newcomer” (Perrault 3). Cinderella’s beauty turns into a power that has an immediate effect on the world. It becomes a power that can silence a room full of nobles with its mere presence. After the prince dances with her and the people begin to eat he “ate not a morsel, so intently was he busied in gazing on her” (Perrault 3). The prince neglects his own hunger just so he can continue to look at Cinderella. This shows that beauty is a weapon that can be used against men; a weapon that can completely enchant a man to the point that he will start neglecting his own

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