Monday, August 19, 2019
The Persimmon Tree by Marjorie Barnard Essay -- English Literature
How does the extract affect the whole story? (The Persimmon Tree by   Marjorie Barnard)    Extract: ââ¬Å"I liked the room from the firstâ⬠¦ anyone who appeared to have  her life so perfectly under control.â⬠    Question: How does the extract affect the whole story?    The writer of the story ââ¬Å"The Persimmon Treeâ⬠, Marjorie Barnard, was  born in Sydney. She was a novelist, historian, biographer as well as  librarian in her lifetime. She wrote many books, and among them, A  House is Built (1928) and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1947) are the best  known (124 tutorial 30-10-01). Although ââ¬Å"The Persimmon Treeâ⬠ is  generally thought to be a piece of subtle work, and we may find it  difficult to get the hidden meanings of the words, Barnard has made it  charming by associating different things. She entitles the story ââ¬Å"The  Persimmon Treeâ⬠ partly because persimmons represent the narrator ââ¬â a  weak and lonely individual whose life is in sharp contrast with what  Barnard describes, the ââ¬Å"shadow of the treeâ⬠, which represents the  outside world. Barnard has delicately presented the narratorââ¬â¢s complex  feeling living between her ââ¬Å"shellâ⬠ and the outside world, and how the  outside forces contribute to her reform in the end of the story.    Obviously in the beginning of the extract, Barnard suggests that  ââ¬Å"shadowâ⬠ does not merely mean ââ¬Å"shade that is caused by an object [it  is the trees in the story] blocking direct rays of lightâ⬠ (Oxford  Advanced Learnerââ¬â¢s English-Chinese Dictionary: 1380). Barnard, in  fact, associates ââ¬Å"shadowâ⬠ connotatively with two things: changing  matters in the outside world and new life. Although it is not  presented clearly in the story, Barnard reflects her idea through the  descriptions of the narrator about the ââ¬Å"shadowâ⬠: ââ¬Å"the mov...              ... her current help.    The story has an open ending, as there is not enough space for further  development. We are not sure about what happens next, although the  narrator ââ¬Å"[thinks] [her] heart would break [that represents changes to  a better self]â⬠ (par.14). However, in my opinion, Barnard succeeds in  portraying the struggle of the narrator when she is put to different  tests (the ââ¬Å"shadowâ⬠, the ââ¬Å"womanâ⬠ and herself). As we read the story,  we can see how delicately Barnard sets each character and expresses  their feelings under different settings. In conclusion, ââ¬Å"The Persimmon  Treeâ⬠ is a piece subtle and delicate work.    Bibliography    Barnard, M. (1976) in Heseltine, H. The Penguin Book of Australian  Short Stories UK: Penguin pp126 ââ¬â 129    Hornby, AS. (1994) in Lee, Peita Oxford Advanced Learners  English-Chinese Dictionary UK: Oxford University Press page 1380                      
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