The novel, McTeague, written by Frank Norris
has many ways to understand the
events. The
relationships between the characters in the story are strange. First, it seems
that the first
half of the story many of the characters come together. For example, Marcus
and McTeague
become friends, Trina and McTeague get married, Maria and Zerkow get
married. As the
story ends, the friendships of the characters breaks down into violence
and death. First,
Zerkow killed Maria and himself, next McTeague kills Trina, and then
Marcus tracks
down McTeague in the desert and they both die as McTeague kills Marcus
and then dies
himself of dehydration. It seems the strong survive and the weak die. In this
case the strong
survive longer than the weak. The theme that connects most of the
conflicts
together is that of greed.
Greed is one of the three major themes in the
novel "McTeague". McTeague
shows the dangers
of greed and how it can get the best of you. This novel shows how
money can make
you from a caring person into a evil person. Zerkow was greatly
obsessed with
gold and riches. The same obsession for money was in all of the
characters.
Zerkow was viewed as a "lost" soul and Trina as a proper young lady,
yet they
were both almost
exactly alike. Here are some quotes on greed. "Miser, nasty little old
miser. You're
worse than old Zerkow, always nagging about money, money, and you got
five thousand
dollars. You got more, an' you live in that stinking hole of a room, and you
won't drink any
decent beer." "She don't care if I get wet and get a cold and die.
No, she
don't, as long as
she's warm and got her money." Greed in the novel is one of the
strongest point.
Social Darwinism's problem is having to keep on gaining in order to have
the things you
can not possible have. Once the greed shows you get what you want, you
might not get
what you really need. Greed is a part of our life too, not just in the book.
Social Darwinism is the second of three major
themes in the novel, "McTeague",
written by Frank Norris.
In McTeague's town people are judged by how much money they
have. When
McTeague was not married to Trina he was living just as he thought he
should. He lived
at a comfortable level for himself. But when Trina married him, she
brought her views
on living into their marriage. Trina moved McTeague up money wise.
He left his old
habits for more expensive habits. He stopped drinking steam beer and
replaced it with
bottled beer which was more expensive. With Trina's lottery winnings
they could have moved
up the social ladder, but Trina refused to spend her winnings on
anything. Since
Trina did not want to spend this money and McTeague lost his job, they
could not live at
their previous standards. Without McTeague's job they could not stay at
their level in
society, so they again moved down. The problem for McTeague and Trina is
that they spent to much of their money, they no
longer acted. This idea is shown in the
following quotes
where McTeague is shown to rich tastes which he never would have
missed since he
did not have them before, but once they were introduced to him by Trina
these luxuries
were missed even more. This quote is how McTeague misses the luxury.
"But he
sadly missed and regretted all those little animal comforts which in the old
prosperous life
Trina had managed to find for him. He missed the cabbage soups and the
steamed chocolate
that Trina had taught him to like; he missed the Sunday afternoon
walks that she
has caused him to substitute in place of his nap in the operating
chair..."
Social Darwinism
is a big problem in the novel "McTeague".
The story of McTeague, by Norris, shows many
examples in which the physical
description of
the characters are used to show that the behavior of them is like animal
instincts. For example,
in the description of McTeague, Norris writes: "For
McTeague was a
young giant, carrying his huge shock of blond hair six feet three inches
from the ground;
Moving his immense limbs, heavy with ropes of muscle, slowly,
ponderously. His
hands were enormous, red, and covered with a fell of stiff, yellow hair;
they were hard a
wooden mallets, strong as vises, the hands of the old-time car boy.
Often he
dispensed with forceps and extracted a refractory tooth with his thumb and
finger. "His
head was square cut, angular; the jaw silent, like that of the carnivore.
McTeague's mind
was as his body, heavy, slow to act, sluggish. Yet there was nothing
vicious about the
man. Altogether he suggested the draft horse, immensely strong, stupid,
docile, obedient."
Another example is the comparison of McTeague as a raging elephant
in pain.
"The brute that in McTeague lay so close to the surface leaped instantly
to life,
monstrous, not to
be resisted. He sprang to his feet with a shrill and meaningless clamor,
totally unlike
the ordinary bass of his speaking tones. It was the hideous yelling of a hurt
beast, the
squealing of a wounded elephant. He framed no words; in the rush of high-
pitched sound
that issued from his wide-open mouth there was nothing articulate. It was
something no
longer human; it was rather an echo from the jungle." There is another
animal struggle
in this story and it is between McTeague and Marcus, McTeague's long
time friend. The
struggle does not become clear until Trina becomes rich by winning a
lottery. The two
men were grappling at each other. The party could hear them yelling and
grunting as they
fought and struggled. Their boots tore up great clods of turf. They came
to the ground
with power. But even as they were in the act of falling, Marcus twisted in
the dentist's
clasp and fell on his side. McTeague crashed down upon him. With his huge
salient chin
digging into Marcus's shoulder, the dentist heaved and tugged. His face was
flaming, his huge
shock of yellow hair fell over his forehead, matted with sweat. Marcus
began to slow
down despite his frantic efforts. One shoulder was down, now the other
began to go;
gradually, gradually it was forced over. Mad because of his defeat at the
hands of the
dentist and before Selina's eyes, he was still furious. With the oath Marcus
had twisted his
head and had bitten through the lobe of the dentist's ear. There was a
sudden flash of
bright-red blood... The brute that in McTeague lay so close to the surface
leaped instantly
to life, monstrous, not to be resisted. He sprang to his feet with a shrill
and meaningless
clamor, totally unlike the ordinary bass of his speaking tones. It was the
hideous yelling
of a hurt beast, the squealing of a wounded elephant. He framed no
words; in the
rush of high-pitched sound that issued from his wide-open mouth there was
nothing
articulate. It was something no longer human; it was rather an echo from the
jungle. This
story puts animal characteristics in the male characters of the story,
especially
McTeague. The beast in man takes over again. The characters in the novel are
used to show that
the behavior of them are connected to some hidden animal instinct.
In the novel, written by Frank Norris, there
was three definite themes. One of
them was Norris
linking the characters to animal instincts. Norris used many quotes to
imply this. The
second theme was social Darwinism. All of the characters wanted money.
They did not know
they wanted money until they were introduced to luxury. They third
and obvious theme
was greed. The greed from money made most of the characters into
terrible human
beings. Everyone was jealous of everybody else. The three major themes
in the novel
"McTeague" are greed, social Darwinism, and characters being linked
into
animals.
No comments:
Post a Comment