Phobe is the niece of Hepzibah. She shows up at the house of Seven Gables. Phobe was looking for a place to stay because of her father getting remarried. Phobe lived with her family in Maryland before coming to the house of Gables. Hepzibah decided to take her in since Phobe was clearly family and in needs of a place to stay. Phobe had a positive effect on the inhabitants of the house of Seven Gables. She started looking after her aunt Hepzibah’s shop. She also started looking after the house of the Seven Gables. Phobe had an amazing spirit. She was a very loving cheerful girl. Phobe usually had a positive attitude and was very respectful. She brought light into the house since Hepzibah at one point was living by herself. Phobe also brightened up the lives of her aunt and uncle Hepzibah and Clifford. …show more content…
The House of Seven Gables holds a family legacy which was relevant to Phobe. Being in that house had very many traditions and legacies that were Phobe’s ancestors even though the legacies and also Phobe's family history was not cheerful and successful, it still was like home to Phobe. Since Phobe’s father was starting a new life in their home with somebody else, Phobe wanted to find comfort in a home with her own family. People living in the house had positive effects on Phobe. Her aunt and uncle Hepzibah and Clifford were very good to Phobe. Since Phobe took in the responsibilities in the house, it gave a positive effect to Hepzibah and Clifford. Hepzibah had her mental problems but in overall were very good to Phobe. She understood Phobe’s reasons for coming to stay in the House of Gables. They treated Phobe like family and respect just as Phobe did to
Eleanor, the protagonist, undergoes a difficult childhood which cause many of her repressed feelings to be expressed through supernatural experiences that are ambiguous. She took care of her ill mother for 11 years, until she died. That affected her tremendously. For example, during Theodora’s supernatural experience, Shirley Jackson displays how Eleanor’s inner child managed to let her grow anger and jealously towards Theodora. Eleanor felt like Hill House was giving Theodora more
The House of The Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne chronicles the generations of a Puritan family and the curse which haunts their fates. Although the Pyncheons are a respected family in their small Massachusetts town, their past is riddled with secrets, mysterious deaths, and the curse of a dying man. Few in the family ever believed in the curse, giving the generational disasters of the family the name of coincidental misfortunes, the simple results of human action. And, while the author attempts to explain away these coincidences with logic and science, he also conveys mysterious hints as to the supernatural phenomena existing within the house of the seven gables. Because of the secrecy surrounding the story, we, as readers, are
The Dark Side of Judge Pyncheon in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Novel, The House of the Seven Gables
In a passage from Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel The House of the Seven Gables, he reveals the complex character that is Judge Pyncheon. Hawthorne suggests that the virtuous appearance Judge Pyncheon exhibits covers the immoral reality that lies behind his lies. Hawthorne leads the reader to speculate on Judge Pyncheon’s questionable character through his skeptical tone and syntax.
Eleanor, the protagonist, undergoes a difficult childhood where she had to take care of her ill mother for 11 years, until she died. Taking care of her mother for most of her childhood prohibited her from developing as a person; that affected her tremendously. For example, During Theodora’s supernatural experience, Shirley Jackson displays how Eleanor’s inner child managed to let her grow anger and jealously towards Theodora. Eleanor felt like Hill House was giving Theodora more affection and attention than it was giving her; similar, to the one that a child would have
As the tale begins we immediately can sympathize with the repressive plight of the protagonist. Her romantic imagination is obvious as she describes the "hereditary estate" (Gilman, Wallpaper 170) or the "haunted house" (170) as she would like it to be. She tells us of her husband, John, who "scoffs" (170) at her romantic sentiments and is "practical to the extreme" (170). However, in a time
The house is referred to as a prison by Hawthorne; he calls Hepzibah and Clifford inmates. The house is a prison because it prevents the inhabitants from truly enjoying any freedom. The inmates attempt an escape from their prison twice. Initially, as Phoebe and Clifford watch the parade of life in the street, Clifford realizes that his life has become meaningless, and he cannot help but try to join the masses below. This could mean the only way for Clifford to become truly reunited with mankind is through death. Unfortunately, Clifford fails to win his freedom and returns to the solace of his prison. The second attempt at escape is by Clifford and Hepzibah. They attempt to escape the clutches of the house, but, alas, it is too late for them. The house has affected them too much to stay away. This is apparent when Hepzibah and her brother made themselves ready- as ready as they could in the best of their old-fashioned garments, which had hung on pegs, or had been laid away in trunks, so long that the dampness and mouldy smell of the past was on them- made themselves ready in their faded bettermost, to go to church. They descended the staircase together...pulled open the front door, and stepped across the threshold, and felt, both of them, as if they were standing in the presence of the whole
seven gables. He has a love for beauty but the years of seclusion had drawn out the life from him
of the fact that she is kept in the house. One specific characteristic of the house that symbolizes
Think back to your own childhood. Could you imagine being a child, and not having a care in the world, but then, as quick as the snap of a finger, that all changes because of a thoughtless mistake made by your parents? In The Glass Castle it is revealed that as Jeannette grew up, she endured hardships inflicted upon her by her own parents. However, if Jeannette had not gone through these things, she never would have gained the characteristics that she values present day. Although Jeannette Walls faced hardships and endured suffering during her childhood, these obstacles formed her into a self-reliant woman who proves that just because you do not have as much money as other families, you can still achieve success in your life.
Lastly, her family betrayed her by not listening to her side of the story after her sister told lies about her, and they betrayed her when they acted as if they did not care if she moved out of the house. In all of these actions, the family itself and certain members of the family are portrayed as uncaring, unsupportive, disrespectful, conniving, deceitful, and hateful to Sister. Through every action of the family, Sister is treated harshly, and she tries to not let this bother her. Yet, anger and bitterness build up inside of her until she cannot take it anymore. Consequently, it built up so much inside of her that it severely affected Sister so profoundly that she moved away from her home to get away from her family.
This helped them get through tough times by making a relationship with an object, so they can keep their minds of all of the negative things that has happened in their lives. Aunt Esther starts to change for Michael. So she tries to interact with him by doing things with the hermit crab. Aunt Esther decides that because she doesn't want Michael to feel lonely that she would start playing with the hermit crab and then she realizes that Sluggo might be lonely too so she buys more hermit crabs. In paragraph 53 Aunt Esther was talking to Michael about how Sluggo will be happy that they got more hermit crabs. “Won't Sluggo be surprised? she asked him happily. Oh, I do hope we’ll be able to tell him apart from the rest. He’s their founding father!” This paragraph shows that Aunt Esther is really trying to turn her life around and live with the changes. This means that even though he said that he hated his aunt he really did love her it just felt like he hated her. home a hermit crab hoping that it could make his life more enjoyable. And Aunt Esther is trying to change so that Michael is no so lonely. In the end, Aunt Esther is trying to make Michael feel more loved by connecting with something that Michael enjoys which is the hermit crab thats name is Sluggo. This story shows that even though Michael and Aunt Esther went through tough times they learned to live with
Although, in the story, the narrator seems to be struck with Porphyria, which can cause the hallucinations and voices she was the sole listener to, along with the excessive hair, and pink teeth, and red nails. This “curse” could be symbolic of something much more common and less gruesome. The porphyria could represent the pubescent stage in the young girl’s life. In the beginning of the story, she goes on to recount what her family said when she was burdened with the disorder-” ‘She was such a lovely baby,’ my mother would say. ‘There was nothing wrong with her.’ It saddened her to have given birth to an item such as myself: it was like a reproach, a judgement.What had she done wrong?” (Atwood, 263). Through this quote, it can be taken that she was not always like this, or as her grandmother would
One of Roderick's fears was death. He was from a well-known and honored family, and he and his sister were the last of the long line of Usher descendants. His sister, Madeline, had been fighting a severe and long-continued illness for quite some time, which had added to much of Roderick's gloom. " Her decease, would leave him the last of the ancient race of the Ushers." Roderick seemed not only to fear the death of his sister and ultimately of himself, but also the uncertainty of the future. "I dread the events of the future, not only in themselves, but in their results. I shudder at the thought of any, even the most trivial incident, which may operate upon this intolerable agitation of soul."
In the novel, “We Have Always Lived in the Castle,” there are many extremely important themes, such as domesticity. This novel focuses heavily on domesticity because it portrays characters who are highly devoted to their home. In this novel, Constance Blackwood, Mary Katherine Blackwood, and Julian Blackwood are three of the only Blackwood’s which are still alive. However, the cause of death of the rest of the Blackwood’s causes many of the townspeople to hate Constance and Mary Katherine Blackwood especially. Although very hated in the village, the two girls and their uncle Julian remain in