The Gilded Six-Bits, by Zora Neale Hurston

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Zora Neale Hurston’s story “The Gilded Six-Bits”, like many of her other stories that were set in Eatonville or about things she witnessed or experienced as she aged, resembles her in some way. The town where Missie May and Joe lived resembled the town Eatonville by it being a black community, the same society as Hurston experienced as a child. In this short story Zora Neale Hurston’s short story “The Gilded Six-Bits” reveals the theme, through multiple excerpts, as English lyricist William S. Gilbert is quoted as saying “things are seldom what they seem”.

The theme “things are seldom what they seem” ("Gilbert") are introduced in the first two paragraphs of the short story. This story opens by describing the yard and home of a Negro couple, Missie May and Joe, in a Negro community as one that appears to be meager and poor. There are quart bottles used as edging on the sidewalk and flowers planted without a plan. Contrary to the scant depiction that is painted of the surroundings of this Negro couple, their home is still filled with love and affection at the onset of this story. Later in the story Missie May is found in bed with the new, seemly rich man in town, by Joe. After the incident Missie May and Joe were much more distant from one another. The affection they would show each other every Saturday disappeared. At the end of the story it is shown that Missie May and Joe may restore their marriage and share the same affection that was shown in the beginning of the story. The relationship between Missie May and Joe it not what it seems after Slemmons and Missie May encounter but ends with them trying to go back to their affectionate relationship. This is evident in the conversation this couple engages in during din...

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...oncluded to be substances that appeared or was said to be one thing but resulted in another. The love and affection Missie May and Joe shared came to view as a lively and loving couple before Otis arrived and after the birth of their son. Otis D. Slemmons being exposed as a fraud after claiming to be a wealthy, rich man is convincing but also misleading. Missie May having interest in Slemmons after expressing some negative thoughts of Otis and the clerk perceiving black people as having no worries all depict the theme “things are seldom what they seem” ("Gilbert").

Works Cited

FamousQuotes.com. First Last. Interlution, 2011. Web. 9 Oct 2011. .

Hurston, Zora Neale. “The Gilded Six-Bits”. Making Literature Matter: An Anthology for Readers and Writers. 4th Ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin, 2010. 685-693. Print.

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