Who Is Elisa's Strength In The Chrysanthemums

651 Words2 Pages

John Steinbeck’s “The Chrysanthemums” revolves around an energetic, androgynous-looking character, Elisa Allen, whose ambition and strength are constrained by the social conventions of her time. Steinbeck first introduces her to the reader while she is cultivating her flower garden; in fact, Elisa is always working, and her vigour as she slaves away at the small plot of land on which she nurtures her chrysanthemums is mentioned constantly. Consequently, the way in which she tends to her flowers is “over-eager, over-powerful”, and the reader is able to infer that she acts the same way in other work, such as while cleaning her “hard-swept...little house, with hard-polished windows, and a clean mud mat”; while the sheer effort she puts into housework — clearly visible in the obsessively clean state of her house — is representative of her boundless energy, Elisa is smothered by a life of “quiet and of waiting”. …show more content…

The author describes the chrysanthemums as “too small and easy for her energy” and Elisa herself boasts of her strength when Henry tries to compliment her before their outing. In fact, Steinbeck’s use of language is very important in “The Chrysanthemums”, and the constrained, repetitive diction parallels the constricted nature of Elisa’s life on the isolated ranch. Ironically, Elisa loses her new-found confidence after realizing that the tinker had taken advantage of her, and cries “weakly like an old woman”, in stark contrast to her oft-mentioned strength and vigour, which are traits rarely attributed to women. Throughout the story, Elisa veils her traditional femininity under masculine qualities and

Open Document