Long Day’s Journey into Night

A Long Day’s Jounrney Into Night, is a tragic play written by none other than Eugene O’neill. The play takes you through one day of life in the Tyrone familly summer home, and as the day advances so does the extreme emotional and psychological torment that each member of the family faces. The most evident inner struggle presented is Mary. Like many of the female characters in the modernist works we’ve read so far, she thrives in the past. Sometimes it brings comfort, like her days at the convent, or some moments bring bad memories like the death of her second son. This event largely contributed to Mary’s morphine addiction. One of Mary’s weakest points is that she can’t bear the thought that the death of her son was just a terrible accident, so she blames her eldest son Jamie. Morphine also helps Mary to slip away from her regret she feels every day for not doing what she wanted in life. One regret Mary frequently thinks of is that she should have never given birth to her youngest son Edmund.

Tyrone: Mary! For God’s sake, forget the past!

Mary: Why? How can I? The past is the present, isnt it? It’s the future,too. We all try to lie out of that but life won’t let us. I blame only myself. I swore after Eugene died I would never have another baby. I was to blame for his death. If I hadn’t left him with my mother to join you on the road, because you wrote telling me you missed me and were so lonely, Jamie would never have been allowed, when he still had the measles to go into the baby’s room. I’ve always believed Jamie did it on purpose. He was jealous of the baby. He hated him.

Mary has a difficult time truly taking responsibility for things, which is evident when she holds a grudge against her son, who was seven when he “killed” his brother. Although it is obvious Mary loves her husband James, she often makes remarks that show she lives with some regret for marrying him.

Mary: And I love you dear, inspite of everything. But I must confess James, although I couldn’t help loving you, I would have never married you If I’d known you drank so much. I remember the first night your barroom friends had to help you up to the door of our hotel room,and knocked and then ran away before I came to the door. We were still on our honeymoon, do you remember? … I didn’t know how often that was to happen in the years to come, how many times I was to wait in ugly hotel rooms. I became quite used to it.

A major theme in Mary’s life is loneliness. A large part of her morphine addiction is her trying to fill a void she feels inside, perhaps her goals in life that never came through, or the child she lost. She has a good enough marriage and sons that truly care for her, but within Mary is isolated in the past, and her loneliness doesn’t subside even in the presence of company. When Mary’s family leaves she expressed her feelings:

It’s so lonely here. You’re lying to yourself again. You wanted to get rid of them. Their contempt and disgust aren’t pleasent company. You’re glad they’re gone. Then Mother of God why do I feel so lonely?

A problem of Mary’s that surfaces in many conversations throughout the play is she doesn’t feel at home anywhere. She complains to her husband that he was too cheap to build a proper house, or buy a decent car, everything is a bargain. As expressed in the previous block quote, Mary does get momentary relief in being alone, however the feeling of lonliness and homelessness looms. While talking with her servant Cathleen, Mary says, “I doubt if they’ll come back for dinner. They have too good an exuse to remain in the barrooms where they feel at home. ” Maybe Mary is envious that the men can feel at home elsewhere while she can’t belong in her own house, and the only place she can reside is a doped up world of fog.

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Glass Menagerie

In the play “The Glass Menagerie”, a major occurring theme is the comprehension of reality.  Each of the characters within the confining walls of the Wingfield home have their own idea as to what is real.  It is apparent mainly in Laura, that her world does not match the one outside her home. Although she is young and attractive, she is terryified of social interaction with strangers.  She hides away from the  public eye, and collects  glass animals. These animals she keeps are largely symbolic of Laura in their fragility and strangness.  They provide an escape from her hovering, overbearing mother Amanda.  Laura’s brother Tom is almost the opposite of her, he does not withdraw to a bizzare glass world.  Tom’s escape from the reality of the home is to go out at night to the movies, and to get drunk.  This helps him forget the fact that his life means nothing, he hates his job, and his problems with his family that seem insurmountable.   The cause of much of the stress in the home comes from Amanda.  Amanda does not have such an obvious alternate reality.  She seems normal enough, she can function in public and hold down a job.  Her quest in life is to see her children find success, find finanicial security, and be liked.  Her intentions are good, but they mask the truth of what her life really is.  Like Blanche in “Streetcar Named Desire”, Amanda is stuck in her southern belle upbringing, which clearly is no longer her way of life.  She is obsessed with her past, constantly bragging to her daughter about how many gentlemen callers she recieved.

One Sunday afternoon in Blue Mountain–your mother recieved seventeen gentlemen callers!  Why sometimes there weren’t enough chairs to accomodate them all. We had to send the nigger over to bring in folding chairs from the parish house.

I believe Amanda likes to live in the past, it makes her feel dignified and superior to her children.  In the end Tom leaves the family in order to escape from living under his tyrranical mother. It is hard to imagine their three different worlds existing succesfully under one roof.   Although Tom manages to leave his family physically, Laura will always be a heavy burden on his heart.  His final monolouge shows the regret and pain he feels for abondoning his sister:

Oh, Laura, Laura, I tried to leave you behind me, but I am more faithful than I intended to be! I reach for a cigarette, I cross the street, I run into the movies or a bar, I buy a drink, I speak to the nearest stranger—anything that can blow your candles out!

Tom tries to find anything that can erase the memory of his sister, so he can live his life without guilt and shame. 

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A Street Car Named Desire

In life a person experiences many tribulations, and life is not always sweet. It is a persons job to decide how to handle life’s problems, and some just choose to ignore reality and live within their own little world. This is true for Tennessee William’s character Blanche from A Streetcar Named Desire. I am going to explore the duel sides of Blanche, what is apparent to others, and who Blanche is internally. Blanche was brought up in a wealthy family on a southern plantation, all her life she enjoyed a lofty status and expects men to recognize what an amazing woman she is. She was appreciated and respected on her plantation, but when the plantation “slips through her fingers”, she is forced to pack up her silks, furs, and diamonds, and moves to the quarter in New Orleans. Upon arrival Blanche is shocked at the conditions her sister Stella lives in. Just the sight of the three-bedroom home makes Blanche feel nervous and unstable, and she immediately reaches out for alcohol. Typically, a person can pretend to be pleased with a living space, and tell a simple lie, like ‘how lovely’, but Blanche is unable to do this. She drinks and openly insults Stella’s home. Although Blanche is proud where she came from, and is of a strong aristocratic standing, she is extremely concerned about what people think of her. She constantly defends herself against possible claims people might make against her.
Blanche is an incredibly needy person, it seems if she has no one to love her, she is no one. Her life is spent trying to find a companion, love, and attention. This extreme desire for affection comes from her first ever experience with love. When she was a young girl, Blanche fell in love with a boy, who revealed to her he was gay, but this information did not end the relationship, Blanche felt it was her duty to help ‘heal’ his sexuality. However, she caught him in the act with another man, and out of shame the boy killed himself. This event is the attributing factor to why Blanche has a weak mental state, and is always trying to fix things. She feels she failed, and because she could not convert him there is something wrong with her. Blanche can’t tolerate feeling like a failure, so she spends her life desperately seeking attention from young men, and suppressing her feelings with liquor.
Blanche comes off as a strong and in control of her life by displaying her pride and ego publicly. She brags to people like Mitch and Stanley what a classy, refined lady she is, but she does not actually follow a strong moral code. Stanley proves to Stella and Mitch that Blanche in fact lived at a dive hotel called the Flamingo, where she had many sexual affairs, and was thrown out by management. Blanche goes to lengths to try to disprove Stanley’s claim, and almost convinces her own mind that it’s untrue. Blanches’ front of strong superior woman is merely her own inner psychological invention to conceal the reality of her life.

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Hey my name is Lindsey, I’m a junior in highschool and right now I’m in my Honors English class. We’ve created blogs to try a new approach to writing, instead of using 2347902843 pieces of paper. In my class we are studying modernist literature and specifically attributes that are prevelent through many works of modernist literature. What I found most interesting was the representation of inner (psychological) reality, including the ‘flow’ of experience through decives such as stream of consciousness. Many of T.S Elliot’s works leave you with confusion and an uncomfortable feeling. It is evident that his inner psychological “relm” greatly influences his writing, this is true in his poem, The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock.  The poem devises mulitple voices to speak with the reader.  Prufrock is an incredibly isolated individual completely seperated from the outside world.  These problems with the social scene exhibited throughout the poem shows T.S Elliot’s

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