Saturday, June 1, 2019

The Importance of the Mare in Anton Chekhov’s Misery Essay -- Anton Ch

The Importance of the Mare in Misery Iona Potapov, the main character in Anton Chekhovs short recital, Misery, is yearning for someone to listen to his woes. Every human he comes in contact with blatantly ignores his badly-needed-to-tell-story by either shunning him or falling asleep. There is, however, one character in this story that would willingly listen to Iona, a character who is with Iona through almost the entire story. This character is his mare. Renato Poggioli describes the story as being built around two motionless figures, an animal and a man (316). Iona and the mare are very much alike. They appear to be each others only companion, and they also act a lot alike. When Iona sits quietly, covered in snow that has recently fallen on him, his short mare is described as white and motionless too (17). Neither man nor mare cares move both are still, frozen in time, waiting. some other example of the similar behavior between the two occurs when the sledge driver clicks to the horse, cranes his neck like a swan. The mare cranes her neck, too (18). As the story opens Iona sits in his sleigh desperately waiting for his first fare, and when that fare arrives he immediately starts to talk of his sons death (18). Although his best possible friend the mare is already present to listen to his story, Iona does not come to this realization until much later in the story. At the beginning, he still believes that what he needs, and will be able to find, is another human being with whom to share his woes. The fares response to Ionas story is, have you gone cracked, you old dog? savor where you are going (18). Iona, upset at this, continues to look around at the fare, in hopes of starting his story o... ... no longer keep silence almost the death of his son. He speaks to the air, and the mare is listening. She doesnt shun him, abuse him, or ignore him. She just listens, as any good animal would do. Works Cited Beck, Alan, M., and Aaron Honoria Katcher. wildca t Companions More Companion Than Animal. Man and Beast Revisited. Ed. Michael H. Robinson and Lionel Tiger. Washington Smithsonian P, 1991. 265-66. Chekhov, Anton. Misery. The Harper Anthology of Fiction. Ed. Sylvan Barnet. New York HarperCollins, 1991. 17-21. Hildebrandt, Sherri. Another Kind of Grief. St. Paul Pioneer Press 13 Sept. 1998 1-4. Poggioli, Renato. Storytelling in a Double Key. Anton Chekhovs Short Stories. Ed. Ralph E. Matlaw. New York W.W. Norton & Co., 1979. 316-317. Royal Bank of Canada. Pets and Human Beings. Montreal Royal Bank Letter, July/Aug. 1989.

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