Desire In John Updike's A & P

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In John Updike’s short story “A&P,” the reader witnesses the power of desire. Three girls walk into the store, A&P, in nothing but bikinis. They were looking for “Fancy Herring Snacks” for one of the girl’s mother. The girls were being kicked out by the manger; however, the cashier quits because he desired one of the girl’s attention and tried to be the hero. The poem “The desire of love-power” by Sri Chinmoy, illustrates that desiring something can change a person’s life for the better, or for the worse. This poem, like the short story, explores the power of desire.
At the beginning of the story, three girls walk in with only bathing suits. As the story unfolds, a diligent reading of the description reveals that Sammy, the A&P cashier, desires the attention from the girls. As “Queenie” and her followers scroll through the aisles, the fellow costumers and the employee’s eyes were glued to their presence. The narrator is a teenager who works the checkout line. He does not notice them when they walk in, but as soon as he spots them he is glued and notices every detail about each of the girls. The author allows Sammy to have a dramatic …show more content…

The speaker states that those who desire could be “raised high” or even “dragged…down.” It is desire that can ruin your life or help it in many different ways. Even in “A&P” when Sammy quit his job to get the attention of the three young girls. Sammy was living in the moment because he was blinded by the girls and ended making a bad decision. In the poem it describes “The desire of thought-power” could dragged a person down and kill “his inner silence.” When Lengel tries to tell the girls to leave that causes Sammy “inner silence” to die and him to speak out loud and tell him it was not okay to embarrass them like that. However, to Lengel Sammy’s action seemed foolish. The speaker in the poem knows what desire can do to a person, and how it can affect their

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