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Monday, March 4, 2019

Angela’s Ashes Comparative Commentary Essay

Although these ii passages taken from the memoirs Angelas Ashes by firedog McCourt and Catcher in the Rye by J. D. S tot all in allyinger, are similar to separately other in some aspects, such as mood, perceptions and attitudes towards ending etc., their society, culture, and their ages thrust the contrast between their styles.In the passage from Catcher in the Rye, we fall upon the 17-years-old Holden going to his brother Allies grave. From his com custodyts close his brothers death, we suck in to interpret his immature and irreverent character. I neck its however his body and all thats in the burying ground, and his mortals in Heaven and all that crap On the other hand, just comparable Frank McCourts, Holdens anger, somberness and resentment is seen by his mood and tone. The 5-years-old pocketable Frankie is already witness to his sister Margarets death, and now he misseds his lilliputian brother Oliver.In this scene, where Oliver is buried in the graveyard, Frank ie tries to understand the things around him with his young curiosity and responses. I did not want to leave Oliver with them. I threw a rock at a jackdaw that waddled over toward Olivers grave. Nevertheless, although his age, Holdens inability to come to terms with his brothers death makes him godforsaken and resentful. All the visitors could get in their cars and turn on their radios and all and and then go someplace nice for dinner everybody except Allie. I couldnt stand it.There are some hints in the passages which suggest about the culture, societies and time the two memoirs took place. Holden says the visitors could get in their cars and turn on their radios and all and then go someplace nice for dinner, whereas Frankie says we rode to the hospital in a carriage with a horse and My mother and Aunt Aggie cried, grandmother looked angry, Dad, Uncle Pa Keating, and Uncle Pat Sheehan looked sad but did not cry and I thought that if youre a mean you can cry only if when you h ave the black stuff that is called the pint. The carriage with a horse and the great deal running like hell over to their cars and turn on their radios demonstrate us that the scene from Angelas Ashes took place many years sooner Catcher in the Rye.Moreover, with Frankies childish comment about his family, the men in his family appear as drinkers this suggests about the Irish culture which all men are drinkers. The uniform comment also clearly shows us the difference between women and men in their culture. We also see that the two characters families and societies are Christian, and believe in the life after death. Holden says I know its only his body and all thats in the cemetery, and his souls in Heaven and all that crap, but I couldnt stand it anyway.On the other hand Frankie explains, Dad said I shouldnt throw rocks at jackdaws, they might be somebodys soul. I didnt know what a soul was but I didnt ask him because I didnt care. Their perception towards religion is the same t hey both believe in what is taught to them, but in both cases the characters sadness and anger are much greater then their religion now, when they lost their brothers whom they love and were connected so much. I wish he wasnt there. You didnt know him. If youd known him, youd know what I mean. Oliver was dead and I hated jackdaws.Both Frankie and Holden are alone with their thoughts and feelings they cannot packet them with anyone. Holden is too immature and powerless to face his brothers death and Frankies parents wouldnt answer his question marks about death. The two narrative characters cannot talk about or express their sorrow, they have to confirm it inside and divert it into anger and hate of other things or volume around them. Id be a man someday and Id come with a bag of rocks and Id leave the graveyard littered with dead jackdaws. All the visitors in the cemetery started running like hell over to their cars. Thats what nearly set me crazy. Hence the two characters need to heal theirselves by something else writing.

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