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
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Subordination
Effective Repetition
Figures of Speech
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Between the stages of birth and death, people open
their eyes, walk around, chit- chat, eat and then go back to sleep. This
routine is what we call life. However there are more layers to life than
just eating and sleeping. A prime example of what life throws at you is
Charlotte Emory, lead character in the novel, Earthly Possessions by Anne
Tyler. We witness this woman playing out two lifestyles in the novel. Her
first lifestyle can be construed as a “slow life” and the potential end
result is a “slow death.” The second can be interpreted as a “fast life”
or living wildly and ending perhaps in a “fast death.” Kidnapped by Jake
Simms, Charlotte Emory lived in the fast lane at the present time. However
her dull, woeful past comes back throughout the novel, telling Charlotte
and the readers that you can never run away from your problems.
In Charlotte’s past, she had married a person named
Saul Emory. Saul won Charlotte’s heart by promising to take her away from
her hometown of Clarion, Maryland and her nagging disabled mother, Lacey
Debney. These reasons for leaving were perhaps miniscule compared to the
bombshell news that Saul had dropped on Charlotte. The words that threw their
marriage off-track were when Saul simply stated, “I’ve been called to preach”
(88). Charlotte felt betrayed by Saul because their plans of exploring the
world together were now delayed. Saul’s profession of ministry profoundly
fueled Charlotte’s need to get away from her mother and the town even more.
His occupation irritated Charlotte because it gave a reason for her to not
trust God. Although, Charlotte was never really a religious person, she might
have construed that God could never be on her side. All of the events in
Charlotte’s life so far has kept her contained in Clarion such as when her
father, Murray Ames fell ill when she had just gotten into a distant college
and now must come back to Clarion to care for her mother as well as her father.
Through these tribulations, she will have questioned God on why her life
has gone in this path. She had long a waited for a day when she could n’d
herself from the sad routine of caring for a mother who she felt did not
want her and a town that had grown too stale for her taste. Saul’s decision
to stay in Clarion was the main reason why Charlotte let Jake Simms easily
take her away from everything.
Perhaps Charlotte should
send Jake Simms a thank you card for taking her away because she could now
leave her old problems behind. When Charlotte was kidnapped,
she never really had shown a strong emotion to be let go. For instance,
Charlotte confided in Jake on her little fetishes of her “lucky medal.”
She stated, “I took it as a sign. Not seriously of course. I just thought,
what if this was trying to tell me something? Like to get on the road, not
sit around any longer, take some action. I thought it was a sign to leave
my husband” (24). By telling Jake about her deepest thoughts, kidnapper and
hostage were able to build a relationship. Ironically, Charlotte was able
to communicate with her kidnapper better than with her family, particularly
Saul. Also, their conversation relieved Jake’s stress because now he felt
that Charlotte wasn’t going to run away because he needed a companion although
he would not admit it. After the conversation, Jake opened up to Charlotte
even more and perhaps all the while instigating a friendship albeit dysfunctional.
For instance, when they needed a means of transportation, Jake made Charlotte
get the bundle of keys from the gas station clerk. The clerk believed Charlotte’s
intentions for using the keys were for restroom purposes only but in this
instance, she had shown her wild side. Jake was able to get a hold of one
key to start a car thanks to Charlotte. Jake used Charlotte to do his criminal
work and she got a good chuckle out of it. “Was that it. Simple as that?
Well. My goodness, I never knew a life crime could be so easy” (43). In one
instant, Charlotte had become an accomplice to a major crime. She could have
told the gas station clerk that she was being held hostage but instead obliged
to Jake’s commands. By letting Jake become the authoritative figure, she
in turn let her past control her future. Although Charlotte desired having
an exciting life outside of Clarion, she never relished the way Jake was
constructing her path of life. If Charlotte wanted to be absolutely free
of all obligations, she would have fled Jake and start her new life by herself,
independently. Charlotte’s past dilemmas of Saul, her mother and the town
of Clarion in general have all been buried during her adventures with Jake
Simms. Nevertheless, Charlotte soon realized that now the problem lay within
her because she wasn’t having such a good time in her travels with Jake Simms.
In comparison to Jake, Amos
Emory, the brother of Saul emphasized the more eccentric characters in Charlotte’s
life. Amos and Jake gave Charlotte a sense that there was more to
life than her routines and debacles at home. The two exemplified
life because they were able to accomplish so many things outside of the norm.
Jake was able to escape from j all and rescue his girlfriend, Mindy. Amos,
although coming back to Clarion, was young, exuberantly full of life and
was a successful school teacher. This secondary character had an affair with
Charlotte. Amos wanted to take Charlotte away after the death of her mother
and Charlotte in her head thought that going away even during a time of crisis
would be splendid. But these were just thoughts that she never acted out
as she returned back to normalcy as Amos felt that she would never take that
next step and leave Saul. Jake and Amos were very influential in the outgoing
lifestyle that Charlotte had an infatuation for. Charlotte never made that
risk of losing everything. Instead, Charlotte was forced by Jake to leave
and in turn forced her to take a good look at herself.
In contrast to the outgoing
characters, Saul, and Charlotte’s mother, Lacey Debney were very much alike.
At the same time in their lives, the two really didn’t want to get out of
their routines of brooding and anti-adventurous tasks. Their lives were
like a slow death to Charlotte because she had ambition to be more than
what they were. Charlotte believed that her mother didn’t really want her
because she remembered Lacey telling her that she wasn’t her baby. This caused
friction between mother and daughter ever since. Nevertheless, on Lacey’s
deathbed Lacey affirmed to Charlotte that she was her real daughter. Charlotte
finally has peace of mind as she stated, “more gently than I’d ever done
anything in my life, I laid my cheek against my mother’s” (196). In realizing
that she is the daughter of Lacey Debney, Charlotte felt more in tune with
life as she now can let that bad childhood memory disappear.
The main reason why
Charlotte came back was because she finally saw how she and Jake were scarily
similar to one another. They both ran away from their problems. For
Jake, it was prison and his girlfriend. For Charlotte, her husband and all
the responsibilities that came with it. Jake, in the end, finally admitted
that he couldn’t go on without Mindy, his girlfriend. He stated, “I was fixing
to leave her ... but I can’t ... She’s right you know, I have some ties to
her” (211). Charlotte, through seeing another couples dilemma, believed now
that she could work it out at home in Clarion, Maryland, This location is
where her daughter, Salinda, her adopted son, Jiggs and her husband, Saul
would be waiting. This is her family and she is ready to restart her adventures
with her family again.
Life is what you make of it. Charlotte, as a hostage
of obligations to her old life, could never find peace of mind but through
her experience as a hostage of Jake Simms, she found the true meaning of
living. The kidnapping was a blessing for Charlotte because it forced her
to confront her problems head on. Walking away from Jake’s way of life, Charlotte
had a new found grasp of energy and courage to go back to her old life.
Works Cited
Tyler, Anne. Earthly Possessions. New York, New York: Random House
Inc, 1993.
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