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Gretel In Darkness Compare And Contrast Essay

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Everyone at some point in their lives has read a classic fairytale. Many people do not realize the intense back stories and unusual ideas that societies may produce and infiltrate into these stories that are then passed down. One such story is Hansel and Gretel. There is a dramatic escape from the witch’s gingerbread house where Gretel is considered to be forced to shove her in the fire. When reading this story, many people think that Gretel’s act was that of defense. She is such an innocent little girl who seems to think nothing of it at the time. What is revealed by the author of a poem titled Gretel in Darkness, is very different from many reader’s original. Characterization can reveal large changes between two stories, even when they …show more content…

In the fairytale, the mood is light and unserious. Even during the event of Gretel pushing the witch into the fire, there only a moment of terror. The act that Gretel committed was quick in the story and didn’t negatively affect her actions later on in the story. The death of the witch is put quite simply, “Then Gretel gave her a push that drove her far into it, and shut the iron door, and fastened the bolt. Oh then she began to howl quite horribly, but Gretel ran away, and the godless witch was miserably burnt to death.” After she committed this act, she ran to her brother and they danced around happily, kissing each other. There is no moment where Gretel stops and realizes what she has done. There is no dark moment where the witch’s death is horribly described in detail. Everything is perfectly fine after that and the children return happily to their father back home. The story has the same light mood of any Disney fairytale. The only darkness within the story comes from the stepmother who wants to leave Hansel and Gretel in the thick forest on the own. The dashes of dark moments make it a thrilling story to read, but the mood is not sad nor gory. The story ends on a happy note, which differs greatly from Gretel in Darkness. In the poem, Gretel seems older and wiser. The whole scene is dark and has a sense of regret tied in. The poet fills in what the modern

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