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The Chrysanthemums Literary Analysis

Decent Essays

John Steinbeck’s short story “The Chrysanthemums,” is about a woman by the name Elisa Allen, who’s unhappy with her life. Her irritation comes from not being able to bear a child of her own, but also her husband never acknowledging her as a woman. In Elisa’s past time, she loves planting and, caring for beautiful chrysanthemums in her garden. Steinbeck symbolizes the chrysanthemums as Elisa’s inner peace, as like anyone else. First, the chrysanthemums symbolize Elisa’s want for children. Therefore care for her garden and gently handles the chrysanthemums with love, and care. Elisa cares for her chrysanthemums like a mother would her baby; she put protective wiring around them and checks consistently to make sure there aren’t any bugs, snails, …show more content…

The images of Elisa nurturing the flowers, as they are her children are of course feminine, but masculinity is observed in her “hard-swept and hard-polished”3 (Steinbeck35) home. These images are carried over into her marriage in which Elisa feels that her husband Henry never recognizes her in a loving manner and causes her to be distant from him. Henry fails at never recognizing his wife as the nurturing woman she is, but Elisa fails to for not speaking up for herself and pointing them out to him. On observing her chrysanthemums, all Henry could say is “I wish you’d work out in the orchard and raise some apples that big”4 (Steinbeck48). Henry’s inability in understanding Elisa’s needs leads her into flirting with the strange man whom arrived to their home. The encounter with the strange “fix-it” man revives Elisa’s feelings of feminism as a woman. Her defiance to his advances wither away after the man charmingly describes the flowers as a “quick puff of color smoke”5 (Steinbeck153). While looking at the chrysanthemums, he begins to admire her. With very few words between the two, Elisa’s masculine image has been overpowered with a feminine one. The strange man is an incentive in her life, by giving him the pot with the fresh flowers, she begins to sense hope, and a brighter beginning of her marriage as the stranger departs from her

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