Blanche de la Force, a very fearful and hesitant nun in revolting France, is one of the main characters in Gertrud Von Le Fort’s The Song at the Scaffold. Another main character is Sister Marie, the most noble and faithful sister of the Carmelite Convent in Compeigne. Sister Marie despises Blanche’s fearful nature because it does not allow the convent to consecrate to martyrdom, and offers advice to the prioress to reject her to the convent. Mother Teresa, the prioress of the convent wanted to help Blanche’s poor soul by accepting and praying with her in the convent. Their convent was one of the holiest convents in France. Many radical ideas erupted during this time, including the reverence of reason over the tradition of religion. …show more content…
She continued to feel reassured by praying for protection from the Infant King. Eventually, an incident caused this reassurance to transform into paranoia. This incident occurred on Christmas night. Tradition was that Mother Teresa and Sister Marie would showcase the statue of the Infant King to every dorm of the convent. As France’s religious freedom slowly incinerated, laws were passed by the National Assembly, which confiscated the Infant King of His crown and scepter. Once the procession of the Infant King came to the dorm of Blanche, she rejoiced in holding the little statue. She adored the statue, and was about to kiss it but noticed the crown and scepter was missing. Instantly, Blanche dropped the statue of the Infant King, breaking off its wax head. Speaking to herself, Blanche exclaims that “now there is only the Agnus Dei” meaning Lamb of God (p. 41). She disregards the concept that the Infant Kings is protected from suffering. In reality, she understands that the Infant King embraced suffering in order sacrifice Himself for the good of others. Calling the Infant King the Lamb of God is a greater title for this change in understanding. Believing in this causes Blanche to slowly rid herself of her fearful attitude, and soon she performs a brave deed that ultimately ends her …show more content…
She escapes because she did not consecrate herself to martyrdom due to her fear of it. She did not want to be disloyal to her fear. Blanche travels to Paris in hopes of finding her father. Meanwhile, the nuns have been attacked with threats of being arrested. Sister Marie is called to a meeting in Paris regarding the convents pension. The nuns agree to send their blessed Infant King with Sister Marie to Paris in hopes to keep the King safe from all evil. Days after Sister Marie left, her fellow Carmelite nuns were arrested by the French revolutionists. As the nuns travel to the Paris Square to be beheaded, they begin singing songs. Sister Marie with the Infant King watches her sisters get martyred. Blanche watches too, blending with the mob. Once the last nun had been martyred and the lips of her voice were silenced, Blanche bravely finished the verse of the song the nuns were singing. Blanche was then killed on the spot by the mob and Sister Marie loses the Infant King in the subsequent riot. The events of the Infant King’s journey to Paris and Sister Marie losing it mirror Blanche’s brave act of singing. Blanche had finally overcame her fear of everything. She victoriously died with her Carmelite nuns, allowing herself to instill hope across the country of France. Blanche unknowingly brought hope to
Blanche is committed to a tradition and a way of life that have become anachronistic in the world of Stanley Kowalski. She is committed to a code of civilization that died with her ancestral home, Belle Reve. Stella recognizes this tradition and her sister's commitment to it, but she has chosen to relinquish it and to come to terms with a world that has no place for it. In a sense, Blanche is frantic in her refusal to relinquish her concept
One of the roles of this excerpt is to provide the background towards understanding Blanche, and the justifications for her mental state and actions. It is evident that in the past she belonged to a higher class where extravagance was common. But when her family in
She tries to hold on to him but is unable to keep him attracted. Blanche is lost, confused, conflicted, lashing out in sexual ways, and living in her out own fantasies. She has no concern for anyone’s well being, including her own. Thus, this is her utter most harmful demise. She has no realistic outlook for the future.
Blanche’s guilt, the principal force driving her downfall, stems from her involvement in the circumstances surrounding her husband Allan’s suicide. After finding her husband with
In this play Blanche has a praxis: She must get a companion to share her life with who can provide her with shelter, food, and financial support and that’s what makes the whole story happen. This praxis is created when two things happen: First, Blanche finding out that the man she married was having an affair with another man and he decided to shoot himself after she confronted him, and second, the loss of her house in Mississippi. These two things create her need of a shelter, financial support and food therefore she decides to stay with her sister Stella.
Marie de France lived in a time when social graces were paramount to a good reputation, lordships and to securing good marriages. A woman was considered less valuable if she lost her virginity; a wife was subjected to her feudal lord, father, brother or son after her husband’s death. According to Angela Sandison’s article “The Role of Women in the Middle Ages”, this was because in the Middle Ages the Church and the aristocracy controlled public opinion and the legal system. These authorities of the times believed a woman’s place was in a submissive role to a man. In The Lay of the Nightingale, we will see how this social and religious hierarchy will impact the behaviors of the three people involved.
The audience always had the feeling that Blanche was a little nuts, but we see her condition worsening as the play goes on. During the final scene we see Blanche go with a doctor and nurse to, presumably, a mental hospitable. Eunice
Blanche's panorama towards gay people had interchanged with her beliefs and this lead to her biased opinion towards her husband. Most likely, things were probably said that weren't meant to be hurtful, but her husband still committed suicide. This misunderstanding of her own feelings as well as her husbands’ potentially lead to a guilt savaged life for Blanche.
The next major theme of the book is the relationship between sexuality and death. Blanche’s fear of death manifests itself in her fears of aging and of lost beauty. She refuses to tell anyone her true age or to appear in harsh light that will reveal her faded looks. She seems to believe that by continually asserting her sexuality, especially toward men younger than herself, she will be able to avoid death and return to the world of teenage bliss she experienced before her husband’s suicide. Blanche’s lifelong pursuit of her sexual desires has led to her eviction from Belle Reve, her ostracism from Laurel, and, at the end of the play, her expulsion from society at large. Sex leads to death for others Blanche knows as well. Throughout the play, Blanche is haunted by the deaths of her ancestors, which she attributes to their “epic fornications.” Her husband’s suicide results from her disapproval of his homosexuality.
due to her past blanche’s actions are unusual and to many they are considered inappropriate. Blanche lives through some very dark and intense incidents before the play takes place, she witnesses the death of her entire family, she loses her family home, and to add to the misery she believes she is the reason her husband killed himself. In an act to move on she retreats into illusion acting as if these incidents never happened. Blanche decides to lie to everyone, from her sister to the man she potentially wanted to marry, she does not give them the truth. She wants to marry mitch but does not tell him about her past, mitch had all right to know, yet she led him on, actions like these in an environment of connection is inappropriate beyond a doubt. Because of her lies and illusions Blanche ends up losing everything, she loses her only chance at a future with Mitch and her freedom when she is sent to the mental institution. Blanches motivation by the past caused her life around her dissolve.
Before one can understand Blanche's character, one must understand the reason why she moved to New Orleans and joined her sister, Stella, and brother-in-law, Stanley. By analyzing the symbolism in the first scene, one
After being stripped of her life-affirming and life-sustaining illusions, Blanche cannot do anything but stare ”blankly and silently into the face of her executioner and sees in his visage the immanent prospect of her own destruction.” (Crandell)
One of the play’s main characters, Blanche, has by no means had an easy adulthood. She has had to deal with her sister setting off to New Orleans with her new husband, the death of her father, losing her own husband, and the loss of their family’s beloved plantation, Belle Reve. With all of this going on, Blanche disguises her pain and delusion, and pretends that is does not exist. In a way,
Firstly, the reader may initially feel Blanche is completely responsible or at least somewhat to blame, for what becomes of
Blanche is not really lost in illusions; rather she uses them as camouflage. She wears them as she wears her clothes and her glass necklaces, as protection from a reality that she finds horrifying. One must not think of Blanche as just a fragile, delicate blossom. There is a fierce desire in her for life at any cost. Her masquerade may