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What Is The Theme Of Paul's Case By Willa Cather

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From the time of the Industrial Revolution to now, people have been on the hunt for wealth. Those that are poor wish for riches, those that are rich only want more. Willa Cather wrote “Paul’s Case” back in 1905 with this same idea in mind. The question has been asked since even before then, does money bring happiness? To those that have little would think that getting money will solve all their problems but those with much can attest to having other types of problems money cannot fix. In “Paul’s Case”, Willa Cather demonstrates that having monetary wealth does not always lead to a “better” life.

Paul’s Case is about a young man that decides to steal money and run away from his “unsophisticated” life to New York but trouble still follows him. …show more content…

Red carnations are the main symbol repeated through the story. The story began with Paul wearing a red carnation in his buttonhole during his meeting with his teachers, “His teachers felt this afternoon that his whole attitude was symbolized by his shrug and his flippantly red carnation flower.” After leaving the meeting he even bowed with a big grin on his face, the principal thought that gesture was nothing but a repetition of the “scandalous red carnation”. While on Fifth Avenue in New York, Paul walked by a flower stand and noticed the red carnations among the other flowers. On his way to the train tracks he brought carnations in his pocket, before he jumped to his death he buried the flowers in the snow. Cather wrote the story so that those carnations symbolize Paul, when he buried the flowers it symbolized his impending …show more content…

These men spent money extravagantly and were one of the reasons Paul was so obsessed with getting money as well. People in Paul’s neighborhood wished for more money and dreamed of living life like Carnegie and Rockefeller, they told stories on their stoops on Sundays, “[Paul] rather liked to hear these legends of the iron kings that were told and retold on Sundays and holidays; these stories of palaces in Venice, yachts on the Mediterranean, and high play at Monte Carlo”. Pittsburgh throughout the story is portrayed as a dreary place, causing more of Paul’s dissatisfaction. During that time New York was seen as the place to be, where the rich went to get richer, which was one of the reasons Paul wished to go to

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