Friday, July 19, 2019
A Worn Path :: essays papers
A Worn Path  	          The story à ³A Worn Path,à ² by Eudora Welty,   tells the journey on foot of an elderly black women,   Phoenix Jackson, from her home to the nearest town.  She makes the journey to go to the doctor to get medicine for  her sick grandson. On the trip, she runs into some  trouble here and there with her dress getting caught  in the underbrush and old age getting to her.  She  encounters a big dog that knocks her over, but is soon  rescued by a passing hunter. As she gets to town,  Phoenix asks a woman to her to help her tie her shoes  then, proceeds to the doctorà ¹s office. When she  arrives there, her memory fails her and she forgets  what her long trip was for. The light comes on and  she remembers her grandsonà ¹s medicine. She gets the  medicine and the money the nurse gives her, goes and  buys a gift for her grandson and sets off for home. In  this story, old age and class alienate Phoenix from  society.    	Old age alienates Phoenix from a hunter she  encounters on the trail. Age alienates Phoenix from  the hunter  when he assumes her age enables her to  continue her trip to town. The hunter states, à ³Why,  thatà ¹s too far! Thatà ¹s as far as I walk when I come  out myself and I get something for my trouble... Now  you go home, Granny!à ² (Welty, 215)  By saying the trip  is too far, the hunter shows he does not believe  Phoenix can make it to town due her elderly age.  When  he says à ³... and I get something for my troubleà ²  (Welty, 215), the hunter infers that he feels Phoenix  has no business being out there making the long trip,  and there is no reason good enough for her to be  venturing that far.  The hunter alienates Phoenix  because her age by telling her the trip is too far and  calling her Granny.    	Class alienates Phoenix Jackson from the attendants  in the doctorà ¹s office.  As Phoenix  walks in the door  one attendant says, à ³A charity case, I supposeà ²  (Welty, 216).  Based on appearance alone, the  attendant makes the assumption that she was a charity  case. à ³A poignant scene at the storyà ¹s close confirms  the readerà ¹s suspicion of Phoenixà ¹s extreme  poverty...à ² (Magill, 2432). This scene proves to the  reader Phoenix is not very high class. She is  automatically assumed to be a charity case and then  asked what was wrong with her, implying she does not  look very good.  Aldridge writes, à ³[In Weltyà ¹s  stories] [t]here are members of racial minorities, the    					    
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