When We First Meet The Grandmother Literary Analysis Essay

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O’Connor uses graphic elements to foreshadow what is about to happen. The most evident feature is the graveyard on the way to Florida and, more interesting, the number of fenced graves – “five or six graves fenced” – that matches the exact number of people traveling. Five adults and a baby; five full people and one not fully formed person; five or six. The description of the grandmother's dress is one of these references; although she did not want to go to Florida, she dressed her best. After getting to the end of the story, the symbolism in the attention that the author paid to the description of the old lady’s outfit comes to represent an implicit reference to death, as dressing up is one of the things typically found in funerals. The scene at Red …show more content…

She is a character that experiences spiritual growth as she is the cause of most bad things that happen in the narrative – she persuades the family to go see the old plantation, lets the cat out of the basket causing the car accident and dooms her family when she recognizes the Misfit. However, when she is about to be shot, the grandmother gains some perspective and acts compassionately upon her murderer as she starts doubting the things she has believed in for her whole life. Her head clears for an instant when she states: “Maybe he didn’t raise the dead.” After going through the major emotional shock of having her entire family sacrificed as a result of her actions and behavior, she finds the understanding that they have been massacred. The line “she would have been a good woman […] if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life” makes that evident to the reader. The Misfit actually allows her to die with dignity and gives her the opportunity of going to Heaven after all the inconveniences that she practiced throughout her life on

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