Rhetorical Elements
Dialogue
Flashback
Setting
Characters
Tone/Voice
Description
Explanation/Example
Process Analysis
Comparison/Contrast
Cause/Effect
Definition
Persuasion
Irony
Audience
Point of View
Opposing View
Structural Elements
Thesis statement
Thesis development
Introduction
Conclusion
Evidence/
Supporting Details
Topic Sentence
Organization
Transitions/Unity
Paraphrase
SUMMARY
Analysis
Mechanics
In-text Citations
MLA Works Cited
Stylistic Elements
Word Choice
Sentence Variety
Active/Passive Voice
Parallelism
Coordination
Subordination
Effective Repetition
Figures of Speech
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In his play, Our Town, Thornton
Wilder portrays a little town and its characters’ lives. The story takes
place in Grover’s Comers, New Hampshire, in 1901. The play is divided into
three meager acts. The first act functions as an introduction for the rest
of the play. The characters and the way they used to live in the United States
more than a century ago are introduced. As the story progresses, we follow
some of the characters’ life experiences such as falling in love, gossiping,
marriage, family life, but also alcoholism, and even death. This life assemblage,
present in Our Town makes the play universally significant and meaningful
for everybody who reads it because it is easy to relate to our own past
or experience.
In the second act, Thornton Wilder tells us about
two main characters’ love story. Using the special technique of flashback,
Wilder first shows how Emily and George fall in love, how they realize they
are meant to be together, and after how they end up married. This part is
also interesting because the stage manager asks us to remember the days when
we were first in love, when we were like “a person sleepwalking” (63). For
my part, it worked; while I was reading, I was really remembering the first
time I was “a little bit crazy” (63). In my past, I remember feeling very
“strong emotions” (67) for a boy, like Emily feels for George. Even if they
are usually shy about their feelings, I am also sure that a lot of boys
remember how it is to be “crestfallen”(62) because of a girl, like George
is about Emily. Also, I am convinced that a lot of married people understand
the way George and Emily feel confused and scared just before their wedding.
The only reason why I think so is that it is normal and human to be scared
of such a big step in someone’s life. Not wanting to “grow old’ (77) is typical
too, as is feeling alone or wanting to “go away” (79). 1 would say that it
is even frequent to feel frightened or anxious before the official first
day you start to build something important with the person you love. Of course,
it is supposed to be a wonderful day, and finally it is for Emily and George.
There is another theme, besides Love and Engagement,
that affects me a lot. I am talking about Death, the focus of Act Three.
As he has throughout, Thornton Wilder organizes this act in a remarkable
way. Living characters, dead characters and the audience are all together
conveyed to Emily Webb’s funeral. She died of childbirth. “Yes, an awful
lot of sorrow has sort of quieted down up here” (87). The first sentiment
we feel is sadness. The entire scene is sad; we
realize that Death can reach anyone of us, even a young married woman, wife
and mother, as Emily. Moreover, a lot of characters such as Mrs. Gibbs, Simon
Stimson, Mrs. Soames and even Webb’s little boy, Wallace, died too.
In this third and last act, it is amazing how Thornton Wilder makes all the
dead characters speak and share what they are feeling with the audience.
This point is really important in the play, because from there Wilder reveals
the entire point: people take life for granted. It is a fact that life passes
so fast. Most of the people don’t know how to appreciate it anymore because
they are too busy with their occupations, and the worst is that they are
not conscious that life can end at any moment. It is really sad but true;
it is too late to realize, like Emily does when she died, that life is precious.
Depressed, she now wants to go back to earth for one day, for her twelfth
birthday. Again, this is a flashback that shows us an important point of
this play. Mrs. Webb summarizes it all in one sentence: “Just open your eyes,
dear, that’s all” (103). This is crucial and evident; we should all open
our eyes and realize that life is a gift given to us. Similarly, I think
that is also a message for the audience, or more, for the entire world. Because
if we wait too long, we could regret it, like Emily regrets it and realizes
how people are troubled and live in the “dark” (97). What is unique in the
play is that it helps people (and I am one of those too) to realize that
life has to be enjoyed. If you know how to analyze and take all the things
and opportunities that are coming to you, you have understood life’s keystone.
Our Town helped me in that way.
Now, you may say that this play is too old-fashioned
and that it can’t have meaning to a modem audience. I understand that,
and I know that the play can be considered limited with all the traditional
“clichés” that it portrays. That is true; there are not a lot of
people anymore who get married at the age of sixteen like Emily and George.
I can imagine that not a lot of people would relate the wedding in the play
to their own wedding memories because they were not seventeen, and perhaps
not as childlike. Additionally, if you are a successful businesswoman, I
can understand that you would think that Mrs. Gibbs’ and Mrs. Webb’s lives
are futile and pointless, and that you can’t relate to them at all. But
there is something that you can find in common; if you are a mother, you
are like them caring about their children. Some things will just never get
old-fashioned.
Today we are living in another century, mentalities
have evolved and our style of life is completely different from the inhabitants
of Grover’s Comers’, “latitude 42 degrees 40 minutes, longitude 70 degrees
37 minutes” (4). We can find a thousand dissimilar things in Our Town that
are not like today. But the uniqueness of this play is that, with all the
differences compared to our way of living, “There is something way down
deep that’s eternal about every human being” (88).
Work Cited
Wilder, Thornton. Our Town . 1939. New York: Perennial,
1998.
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