Sunday, February 17, 2019
Symbolism in Chapter 17 of Chopin’s The Awakening :: Chopin Awakening
Symbolism in Chapter 17 of Chopins The Awakening The arrest of Chapter 17 in Chopins THE AWAKENING mop upers a richly pissed portrait of a woman desperate to break through the bonds of domesticity and go in into the unknown. The passages (pages 74 and 75) immediately follow the dinner scene in which Edna initiative announces to Lonce that she will longer observe the ritual of Tuesday reception day. After Lonce departs for the club, Edna eats her dinner alone and retires to her board It was a large, beautiful room, rich and picturesque in the soft, dim weakly which the maid had turned low. She went and stood at an collapse window and looked out upon the kabbalistic tangle of the garden below. All the mystery and witchery of the night seemed to rush gathered there amid the perfumes and the dusky and tortuous outlines of flowers and foliage. She was seeking herself and finding herself in just such sweet half- ugliness which met her moods. But the voices were not soothing that came to her from the darkness and the sky above and the stars. They jeered and sounded mourning notes without promise, devoid even of hope. She turned keister into the room and began to walk to and fro, down its whole length, without stopping, without resting. She carried in her hands a thin handkerchief, which she tore into ribbons, rolled into a ball, and flung from her. Once she stopped, and taking off her wedding ring, flung it upon the carpet. When she saw it lying there she stamped her heel upon it, striving to pinch it. But her small boot heel did not make an indenture, not a mark upon the glittering circlet.In a sweeping animosity she seized a glass vase from the table and flung it upon the tiles of the hearth. She wanted to destroy something. The crash and twaddle were what she wanted to hear. The scene neatly encapsulates Ednas rage at being confined in the domestic sphere and foreshadows her increasingly bold attempts, in subsequent chapters of the novel, to break t hrough its boundaries. At first glance, the room appears to be the model of domestic harmony large, beautiful, rich and picturesque, it would appear to be a welcoming, soothing haven for Edna. However, she is drawn past its obvious comforts to the open window, a familiar image in THE AWAKENING. From her vantage point in the second story of the house, Edna (who at this point in the narrative is settle down contained by the domestic/maternal sphere she is in and of the house) gazes out at the wider world beyond.
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