A Good Man Is Hard To Find Grandmother Analysis

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The Grandmother, the unnamed but central character of Flannery’O’Connor’s “A Good Man Is Hard to Find”, is introduced preparing for a trip to Florida with her family. During the preparations she smuggles in her cat, Pitty Sing, to join them on the trip despite the wishes of her son Bailey. Briefly remarked on by Grandma is also the recent escape of the famed outlaw calling himself The Misfit, whom she expresses concern about meeting on the road. During their trip they stop briefly at a restaurant known as The Tower, where she strikes a brief kinship with the owner, Red Sam. Briefly, they commiserate over their mutual agreement that the world has degraded morally since earlier times. Continuing the journey after leaving the restaurant, Grandma suggests stopping at a nearby plantation of her childhood. Grandmother relays a childhood rumor that the house contains a secret panel full of silver. To Bailey’s consternation and Grandmother’s delight the children demand they stop there. After a long search for the house Grandmother Pleading profusely, she insists that The Misfit is a man of good southern aristocratic blood that would never harm a lady. The Misfit refuses the title of a good man, but agrees that he is not the worst of men, and begins to treat Grandmother with staccato politeness. As her family is led off one by one to be slaughtered, her increasingly desperate calls for civility take on a religious tone. The Misfit has pious feelings of his own, but views the vindication of one’s sin as either all important or impossible. Unable to act on faith, he tells her that if he only could be sure of salvation, he wouldn’t be what he was now. This tortured explanation touches Grandmother, and she reaches out to him as her own child. The Misfit recoils in horror and kills her without hesitation, and Grandmother dies

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