Orchard Essays

  • In The Orchard

    1232 Words  | 3 Pages

    An Interpretation of “In the Orchard” For any educator that is searching for a poem to arouse the interest of students enlisted in upper level literature classes, the poem “In the Orchard” by Muriel Stuart, written in the early twentieth century, conveys the ageless theme of unrequited love. The poem has all the elements of making students understand how far back the feeling of unrequited love has been around. We can understand these elements better through the rhetorical strategies. A rhetorical

  • Cherry Orchard

    589 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Cherry Orchard The “Cherry Orchard” by Anton Chekhov, is a symbolic story about change. The story centers on one family, and the people that come into their lives. It takes place during a time where Russia is changing, becoming a more modern world. The cherry orchard symbolizes the past, and each character deals with leaving the past behind. The play begins with Lopakhin, a friend of the family, coming to the house, and being greeted by the maid, Dunyasha, only to find out that the owner, Ranevsky

  • Character in The Cherry Orchard

    506 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov is a dramatic play set at a cherry orchard in Russia. Some of the characters that help set the dramatic setting of the play are Lyuboff, Lopahin, and Pishtchik. These characters find life difficult because they fail to understand each other and because they passively submit to their environmental situations without making an effort to rise above them. Lyuboff is the owner of the cherry orchard, and has lived there her whole life. The estate has been handed down

  • The Cherry Orchard

    2017 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Cherry Orchard: Critical Analysis The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov is about a Russian family that is unable to prevent its beloved estate from being sold in an auction due to financial problems. The play has been dubbed a tragedy by many of its latter producers. However, Chekhov labeled his play a farce, or more of a comedy. Although this play has a very tragic backdrop of Russia's casualty-ridden involvement in both World Wars and the Communist Revolution, the characters and their situations

  • The Cherry Orchard - The Struggle

    796 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Cherry Orchard - The Struggle Anton Chekhov’s play The Cherry Orchard introduces readers to a pre-Revolution Russian family faced with the impending sale of their estate, the Cherry Orchard. The main character in the play is the owner of the Cherry Orchard, Lyubov Andreyevna. It is in the play that Lyubov must ultimately decide whether to allow her Cherry Orchard to be cut down to make room for villas or to sell the entire estate to pay off her debts. It is her unconditional love for both the

  • Analyzing Wilbur’s Orchard Trees, January

    538 Words  | 2 Pages

    Analyzing Wilbur’s Orchard Trees, January By reading one of Richard Wilbur’s poems, one can get extremely confused while trying to find the actual meaning of the poem. Someone could take the easy way out and not try to get deep down into the poem to find the real meaning, or one could investigate the poem and learn what Wilbur is trying to get across to the reader. In "Orchard Trees, January," one could pick up what Wilbur is trying to say if one takes the time to think about it. On some of his

  • The Cherry Orchard and the Rise of Bolshevism

    3100 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Cherry Orchard and the Rise of Bolshevism Anton Chekhov uses The Cherry Orchard, to openly present the decline of an aristocratic Russian family as a microcosm of the rapid decline of the old Russia at the end of the nineteenth century--but also provides an ominous foreshadowing of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution in the disparate ideals of his characters, Trofimov and Lopakhin, however unintentionally. The Gayev family and their plight is intended as a symbolic microcosm of the fall of the

  • Alex La Guma's The Lemon Orchard

    5282 Words  | 11 Pages

    Stable Meaning, the Perversion of Nature, and Discursive Communities in Alex La Guma's "The Lemon Orchard" South African writer Alex La Guma was an active member of his country's non-white liberation movement. One of the 156 people accused in the Treason Trial of 1956, La Guma wrote his first book, A Walk in the Night and Other Stories, in 1962 (Wade 15). "The Lemon Orchard," a story which appeared in this debut work, is a gripping piece about the horror and cruelty of racism. In the story, La Guma

  • Comedy and Tragedy in The Cherry Orchard

    1537 Words  | 4 Pages

    Comedy and Tragedy in The Cherry Orchard Anton Chekov's The Cherry Orchard serves as a glimpse into the lives of upper middle-class Russians at the turn of the century. The play at times seems to be a regretful account of past mistakes, but at other times it seems very comedic. The final outcome tends to classify it primarily as a tragedy with no shortage of lighthearted moments. It invokes many feelings within the reader: joy, regret, pity, and anger are all expressed among the interactions

  • Analysis Of The Cherry Orchard

    1138 Words  | 3 Pages

    161 24 March 2014 Response Paper The Cherry Orchard The Cherry Orchard describes the lives of a group of Russians, in the wake of the Liberation of the slaves. The action takes place over the course of five or six months, but the histories of the characters are so complex that in many ways, the play begins years earlier. The actor I choose to write on was Yermolai Alexseyevich (played by Erin Despanie) he is the other lead character in The Cherry Orchard. In my opinion his character was dramatic and

  • A Comparison of Illusion in The Cherry Orchard and A Doll's House

    1991 Words  | 4 Pages

    Dangers of Illusion in The Cherry Orchard and A Doll's House In the plays, The Cherry Orchard, by Anton Chekhov, A Doll's House, by Henrik Ibsen, and Galileo, by Bertolt Brecht, the protagonists' beliefs are a combination of reality and illusion that shape the plot of the respective stories.  The ability of the characters to reject or accept an illusion, along with the foolish pride that motivated their decision, leads to their personal downfall. In The Cherry Orchard Gayev and Miss Ranevsky, along

  • Port Orchard: A Natural Disaster

    861 Words  | 2 Pages

    Port Orchard, Washington is a town overflowing with rich forests, fresh air, and spectacular views. As Isaac Suttle walks from his front door, he can see the Two Brothers to the west and Mt. Rainier to the east. His home sits quietly in an area of Port Orchard surrounded by trees, the nearest neighbor hundreds of feet away. Like that of most western Washington, the weather is cool and rainy throughout the year with little relief in the summer. The drizzly rain can last for months; Isaac can remember

  • Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard

    883 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the very early twentieth century, Anton Chekhov composed a play entitled The Cherry Orchard, which focused on many themes including childishness, clinging to the past, and hypocrisy of humans, all of which were clearly represented throughout the play. These themes are all causes of the theme that stands out in The Cherry Orchard above all else, this being the reversal of fates. Madame Ranevsky is the joint owner of a large estate which neighbors the home of Lopakhin, a son of the serf who belonged

  • Love in Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard

    736 Words  | 2 Pages

    by the rising middle class, the working class had grown skeptical of the concepts of love and freedom, because such concepts had been used to increase the social and economic position of the middle class at the expense of the masses. In The Cherry Orchard, this is most evident in the condition of the former serf, Firs. He expresses his desire for the security and order found in serfdom. United under the banner of love and freedom the lower and middle class fought to gain liberation from the old feudal

  • Cultural Shock in Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard

    2261 Words  | 5 Pages

    Cultural Shock in Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard projects the cultural conflict of the turn of the twentieth century of Russia. With a historical allusion, Chekhov exhibited the changing Russia with "slice of life" in his play. The Cherry Orchard is not only a depiction of Russian life but also an understatement of changing traditional value. Cultural conflict itself is an abstraction. To explain it, it is the traditional culture that is unable to resist the

  • The Cherry Orchard and Three Sisters

    550 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Cherry Orchard and Three Sisters. The Cherry Orchard is a play about a family that is about to lose their home. The madam of the house came home from Paris to find her frivolous spending and her brothers in competence will cost them their inheritance. As well as their family home all they seem to want is to be happy. Their life goals seem to be to have love and not have to be peasants. Also they want to keep the family orchard as it is when splitting it up would save them as well as their family’s

  • The Cherry Orchard: A Literary Analysis Of Anton Chekhov

    1961 Words  | 4 Pages

    literary Analysis of Anton Chekhov “The Cherry Orchard” Anton Chekhov’s play the “Cherry Orchard” was his last play and is related to the era of Russia during the 1890’s and the 1900s. A Russia that was going through a transition form the classical tsarist era to an era of change (Ryfield 240). The Cherry Orchard is the main focus upon the play and creates a theme in which audiences who read or watch the play, wonder how long the ancient cherry orchard will last; due to plays uncertainty about it

  • Symbolism in The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov

    1577 Words  | 4 Pages

    Symbolism in The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov Mamma! Are you crying, mamma? My dear, good, sweet mamma! Darling, I love you! I bless you! The Cherry orchard is sold; it?s gone; its quite true, it?s quite true. But don?t cry, mamma, you?ve still got life before you, you?ve still got your pure and lovely soul. Come with me, darling, and come away from here. We?ll plant a new garden, still lovelier than this. You will see it and understand, and happiness, deep, tranquil happiness will sink down

  • Relevance of The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov

    737 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov draws in a universal audience, as the play’s themes and characters are relatable to any time period. The characters face challenges and anxieties that were felt by people thousands of years ago and will continue to be felt by people far into the future. The Cherry Orchard encompasses and embodies characters and themes that are relevant to modern times such as social change, mid-life regrets, and hope that the next generation will go out into the world, make a difference

  • Tragically Inane: The Cherry Orchard And Six Characters

    1972 Words  | 4 Pages

    The deconstruction of the conventions of the theatre in Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard predicts the more radical obliteration presented later by Pirandello in Six Characters in Search of an Author. The seed of this attack on convention by Chekhov are the inherent flaws of all the characters in The Cherry Orchard. The lack of any character with which to identify or understand creates a portrait much closer to reality than the staged drama of Ibsen or other playwrights who came before. In recognizing