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The Lamp At Noon By Sinclair Ross

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Consequences of Isolation

Socially isolated individuals fundamentally can not function in society as sufficiently as those with rich social lives, lacking the mental requirement of expression, all thoughts and feelings remaining internalized. A morbid study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology (Vol. 109, No. 2, pages 186-204) showed that socially isolated individuals were two to three times more likely to die during the nine year span the study took place over than those who had fellowship from peers. Ellen from the short story The Lamp at Noon is a perfect example of the effect referenced in this study; the weather acts symbolically to show her isolation from the rest of the world, the consequence being the loss of her own …show more content…

Those that continued to work on their farms (Ellen and Paul) had a very hard time getting by, which led to immense mental and physical stress to try and keep things well. Mass famine and poverty broke out, and in general was a horrible time for many in that time. This sets the basis for the short story, having the history of previous arguments being explained throughout the plot. Between the internal conflict of the decision whether or not to leave the farm, the external conflict of the weather ruining the farm, and the external conflict of the disagreement coming from Ellen and Paul’s opinions, a very difficult time was set for the two.

The story begins with the lamp being lit, which acts as both a recurring motif and also a symbol for the futility of their attempts to make light of the situation, the lamp hardly doing anything to the “impenetrable fog” that surrounded them, even at noon. It parallels the couple’s feelings towards the farm, the lamp proving just as ineffective as they were, the lamp attempting to push light through the thick fog, and Paul attempting to grow crops on the landscape, described as a “desert” by Ellen. The conflict is a man vs. nature conflict, the protagonist being Ellen and Paul, the antagonist being the dust bowl. Both Ellen and Paul face isolation due to this conflict. Ellen’s parents run a shop in the city, and she desperately wants to work there instead, the uselessness of their attempts to work through the storm driving

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