Nuveria Tajammul #21 Ela Short Story
The Haunted Doll
In the middle of nowhere, a doll lay still. It had long, wavy orangish hair and wore a pink frilly dress. Then suddenly, she opened her blue eyes and grinned, evilly.
Emily held up her hands and breathed into them to warm them up.
“I’m freezing!” she yelled.
George told them that his dad said that today it might snow.
Jack heard them,
“Nature’s little thermometer is acting up!”
Emily got annoyed, she looked at him then turn around,
“I’m ignoring that dork, and I’m sure it's no issue compared to the shrinking issues you two are facing now!”
Jack and George, both got depressed. Jack looked at her and asked,
“Do you know how much I hate you?”
“Soon my six-year-old brother will grow taller than you guys!”
…show more content…
“You loose Emily! Hehe!”
All of a sudden the shadows turn towards Emily and start to attack her. They turn into a string like creatures and hold her up. Gripping her tight, they hold her, like how a person is hanged up. She tries to scream for help, so they cover her mouth. When Emily is not able to move completely, Mary comes in front of her. She raises her hand and says,
“It's decided let's pick them out!”
One of the shadows turns into a claw, heading towards her eye, ready to pick it out. Emily tries to struggle loose when her handkerchief falls out of her pocket. Mary looks at it, with her deep blue eyes, remembering when Emily wiped her cheek with the same handkerchief. She said,
“Ok! It’s tiny but it’s the thought that counts, let her go, guys!”
They started to whine saying that, they wanted to pick out her brown eyes and pull out her dark red hair. Mary gave them a death stare and then frightened, they let Emily go.
Emily fell on the floor, sweating. Her eyes we shocked and her body was trembling in fear. She was out of breath and couldn't tell whether she was alive or dead.
“Yeah, that was a close one for
I have never thought so much about my future, until hitting eighteen in year twelve. The stress of attending uni, studying, securing a job and the big one- getting married! Marriage, I’m sure, has been something every teenage girl looks forward to. As for me, I have never been so skeptical of such an exciting life event.
In The Glass Menagerie, by Tennessee Williams, and A Doll House, by Henrik Ibsen, each protagonist faces the difficulty of society’s rule. Tom, being the “man of the house”, provides for his family and is depended upon. Were as Nora is co-dependant of her puppet master of husband Torvald. Despite their differences, Tom and Nora parallel the flaws in their common daily lives.
The day after her father's death, the women of the town went to give their condolences to Miss. Emily. To their surprise, Miss. Emily was "dressed as usual" and had "no trace of grief on her face (Perrine's 285)." Emily told the women that her father was not dead. Finally after three days of trying to hold on to her father, "she broke down, and they buried her father quickly (Perrine's 285)." The town's people tired to justify Miss. Emily's actions, by saying that she had nothing left, and was clinging to the one thing that had robbed her for so long they convinced themselves that she was not crazy.
She cannot not let go of the man that has monitored her every move. "We remembered all the young men her father had driven away, and we knew that with nothing left, she would have to cling to that which had robbed her." She refuses to bury her father, not because she cannot bear to part with him, but because she refuses to let go of the man that she now has complete control over. When Emily is forced to part with her father's body she sets off to find his replacement.
She somewhat got into an argument with her good friend Siobhan about boys. Angry, she stomped off and walked into the woods. While walking, many negative thoughts raced through her mind. She could not take it anymore. Suddenly, she fell into a deep hole. After she fell into the hole, she suddenly realised that there was a skeleton next to her. She screamed loudly, calling for help.
The narrator talks about Emily’s death at the beginning of the story. Throughout the text there is descriptions of Emily’s death haunted life. The narrator compares her to a drowned woman, a bloated and pale figure left too long in the water.
The very beinning of the story is extraordinary. It begins with the burial of Emily, the residents around her coffin did not feel anything, most of them were curious. There were neither friends nor relatives, nobody who was in mouring for her, only inquirers. The readers can ask, what kind of person was Miss Emily? Why the others did not feel sadness? Perhaps there is a bigger question: what was the reason that nobody went to her house more than ten years (except her slave, Tobe).
Miss Emily also shows how she is living in the past when her father dies. She told everyone that came to get his body that her father was still alive, she refused to believe he was dead. However, she eventually was forced to give them his body. "After her father's death, she looked like a girl 'with a vague resemblance to those angels in colored church windows-sort of tragic and serene.' This suggest that she has already begun her entrance into the nether-world"(Rodriguez 1). The people did not know what to make of Emily. Many thought she was
She fears to lose her love one. She also stops teaching color painting classes so kids do not come to her house. Because of Emily’s reserve nature, people of the town also think that he has now gone mad. Generations after generations, people of town has look at Emily as a responsibility of town. “Alive, Miss Emily had been a tradition, a duty; and a care; a sort of hereditary obligation
For example, when her mom left her alone some nights, Emily would be terrified, and become delirious. This was a lack of negligence and carelessness by the mother. The connection and internal guilt the mother had just continued to get worse, forcing Emily to go away to a convalescent home in the
Another indication of Emily?s mental condition is the insinuation of necrophilia. Simply put, necrophilia is a sexual attraction to corpses. The roots of Emily?s necrophilia are deep, and unique. Emily?s father controlled her all of her life. He made every little decision for her. For Emily her necrophilia is a way for her to have control, and have things be, for once, the way she wanted them to be. Emily refused to let they body of her father go. It is speculated that Emily and her father had an incestuous relationship with her father. After being abused for so long, Emily felt that she was regaining her own self by keeping her father and being able to do what she pleases with him.
Women roles have drastically changed since the late 18th and early 19th century. During this time, women did not have the freedom to voice their opinions and be themselves. Today women don’t even have to worry about the rules and limitations like the women had to in this era. Edna in “The Awakening” by Kate Chopin and Nora in “A Doll House” by Henrik Ibsen were analogous protagonists. The trials they faced were also very similar. Edna and Nora were both faced with the fact that they face a repressive husband whom they both find and exit strategy for. For Nora this involved abandoning her family and running away, while Edna takes the option that Nora could not do-committing suicide. These distinct texts both show how women were forced to
Emily had depression and was dealing with it in her own way by closing herself off. Looks could be very deceiving and in this case, Emily surprised the town when she died. The townspeople realized that there was more to her than they thought and were quick to judge.
Once Miss Emily’s father died, she didn’t want to let go. She had no one to love and lover her back. The only love and compassion she knew was her fathers. With him leaving this world entirely, I think she didn’t want to believe he was dead. She wanted to hold on as much as she could. “She told them that her father was not dead. She did that for three days… Just as they were about to resort to law and force, she broke down, and they buried her father quickly.” Again, Miss Emily’s necessity for love made her unconscious of the real world, wanting to hold on to something that was not there.
Write a paper that explains how history is portrayed in a particular play emphasizing what a certain historical event, personage, or situation enables the playwright to communicate. Discuss what effect the playwright's transformation of historical reality has on an audience.