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Grenouille As The Tmell: The Portrayal Of Human Beings

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Metaphor of Grenouille as the Tick: the Portrayal of Human Beings Perhaps nobody wants to be called a tick when it comes to profile pictures, but a man was branded as an abhorrent tick by his creator. In the novel Perfume: the Story of a Murderer, Patrick Süskind describes the main character as a tick that would do an action that which normal human beings would be unwilling to. Grenouille is born with a powerful ability to smell and pursues a quest to obtain the perfect perfume in the world at the cost of 26 budding girls. Throughout the novel, the author uses the metaphor of the tick systematically to illustrate Grenouille who is subsequently revealed as a mirror to the dark side of human beings, suggesting that people are as abhorrent as …show more content…

The author forges the negative feelings inside the reader’s mind and then redirects the reader to the dark nature of humanity consequently. Likening Grenouillle to the tick in undesirable physical features, explaining the feeling caused by hiding body odor, and foreshadowing deaths are used in the novel to evoke the negative feelings on the part of the reader efficiently. Grenouille overcomes various diseases and accidents in his life, bearing “scars and chafings and scabs from it all,” and with a limp from his “slightly crippled foot” (p. 10). In the tannery, he survives from even more disfiguration after he goes through the dreaded anthrax leaving him “scars from the large black carbuncles behind his ears and on his hands and cheeks” (p. 14). The author characterizes Grenouille as being not personable at all. In addition to these physical deformities, Suskind portrays how the orphanages abhors Grenouilles’ existence with them from his babyhood: “From the first day, the new arrival gave them the creeps” (p. 10). The author continues to explain why he is alienated, saying “It simply disturbed them that he was there. They could not stand the nonsmell of him. They were afraid of him” (p. 11). His lack of odor causes people to stay away. Also the author uses the literary devices to foreshadow untimely deaths that Grenouille …show more content…

For Süskind, the protagonist should be able to obtain skills of perfumery and make the best perfume that the world has ever seen. To survive through his childhood, apprenticeship, and the society around him, he is required to be tenacious enough, not to mention olfactory talent. At the tannery Grenouille uses all his energy to be obedient, store his “energies of his defiance and contumacy and expend them solely to survive the impending ice age in his tick like way” (p. 14). At Baldini’s perfumery, Grenouille is able to survive. When he regains his purpose of life, he revives miraculously from a dead like state: “he was only sleeping very soundly, deep in dreams, sucking fluids back into himself. The blisters were already beginning to dry out on his skin, the craters of pus had begun to drain, the wounds to close” (p. 43). Lastly in the perfumery in Grasse, Grenouille endures every hardship to reach the goal: “This went on for several days, from morning till evening. It was tiring work. Grenouille had arms of lead, calluses on his hands, and pains in his back as he staggered back to his cabin in the evening”(p. 68). From these adversities that Grenouille endures, the author imbues the reader with the feeling that he could make it to the end. The author wants to present a convincing artwork with a seamless flow of the plot by

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