РефератыИностранный языкPhPhoenix Jackson Mind Over Matter By Welty

Phoenix Jackson Mind Over Matter By Welty

Essay, Research Paper


Novelist Eudora Welty is often studied and adored by many


readers; her much deserved recognition comes from her brilliant, deeply


compassionate, and lively stories and novels (Ford 36). Like many of her


stories, Eudora Welty’s "A Worn Path" is set in Mississippi. In


"A Worn Path," Welty focuses on an old woman’s journey to Natchez and


on the many obstacles that she encounters along the way. Phoenix is going to


town to get medication for her beloved grandson. But he trip is difficult


because nature and her handicaps are making it hard for her to reach her


destination. Nevertheless, the old woman boldly continues along the equally old


path, struggling every step of the way. Even though Phoenix faces a number of


obstacles, she reaches her destination and triumphs over her physical handicaps


and over nature’s barriers by relying on her inner strengths. Although Phoenix


is nearly blind, she does not let her failing eyesight keep her from reaching


her destination; she relies on her feet to take her where she needs to go.


"Old Phoenix would have been lost had she not distrusted her eyesight and


depended on her feet to know where to take her (162)." The ragged old woman


inches her feet forward with the aid of a makeshift cane, dragging her untied


shoelaces along the icy road. Phoenix’s feet carry her to the top of the hill


and then carefully guide her down the hill. But her eyes fail her as she nears


the bottom of the hill and her dress gets snagged in a thorn bush. "Old


eyes thought you was a pretty little green bush (159)." She carefully frees


herself and continues along the path. When Phoenix nears a fallen tree that lays


over the creek, she closes her eyes and lets her feet guide her across it. Her


feet take her across the fields and lead her out of the swamp and through the


maze. As she makes her way through the corn field, she stumbles across a tall,


dark figure. "Ghost," she said sharply, "who be you the ghost of?


For I have heard of nary death close by (160)." Her eyesight tricks her


into believing that it is a ghost, or perhaps, the Grim Reaper that has come to


take her away. When Phoenix gets no response from the "ghost," she


bravely touches the figure and realizes that it is only a scarecrow. The


relieved woman kicks up her dependable feet and dances with him. Phoenix


acknowledges that it is nature’s job to stall her. However, she makes it clear


that she has no time for the barriers that are being thrown across her path. She


knows that her life is limited and she has no time for obstructions. When she


finds herself snagged on a thorn bush, she talks to it as she patiently frees


herself. "Thorns, you doing your appointed work Never want to let folks


pass-no sir (159)." As Phoenix wobbles along, she comes across a sitting


buzzard and in three simple words she lets him know that he will not dine upon


her. "Who you watching (160)?" She slowly sways past him and continues


her journey, while nature carefully plans the next obstacle. Sure enough, as


Phoenix stands and ponders, a big black dog creeps up behind her. "Old


woman," she said to herself, "that black dog come up out of the weeds


to stall you off (161)." She accepts the fact that the black dog is merely


following nature’s orders. Phoenix’s old body is not as quick as her wit. When


Phoenix is startled by the huge mutt, her mind reacts much faster than her body,


causing her to drop into a weed-cushioned trench. The old woman is discovered by


a young hunter who quickly snatches her out of the ditch. As they converse,


Phoenix catches a glimpse of a shiny nickel that drops out of the hunter’s


pouch. Her mind reacts; her face lights up and she claps her hands. "Look


at that dog! She laughed as if in admiration. He ain’t scared of nobody. He a


big black dog (161)." Knowing that her old body needs plenty of time to


grab the nickel, she uses her wit to shift the hunter’s attention toward the


"fearless" dog. As the hunter sets off to prove his own fearlessness,


Phoenix goes for the coin. "She was slowly bending forward by that time


(162)." She gradually bows and places the coin in he

r apron. As Jackson


slowly lifts her body, she notices a bird flying above her. "Her lips


moved. God watching me the whole time. I come to stealing (162)." She


realizes that God is watching her sin. The culpable woman boldly faces the man,


ready to admit her guilt. After a few moments, Phoenix concludes that the hunter


is clueless of her thievery so the witty woman subtly confesses to the man:


"I seen plenty go off closer by, in my day, and for less than what I


done," (162)." Phoenix hobbles along, happy about the shiny nickel in


her pocket, yet unsure of why she needs or wants it. Although Phoenix’s


deteriorating memory keeps her from knowing why she is making the journey, her


determination surpasses her uncertainty. The strong-willed woman has overcome


every obstacle that nature has put across her path. "Keep out from under


these feet, little bob-whites….Keep the big wild hogs out of my path. Don’t


let none of those come running my direction. I got a long way (159)." She


bravely warns the animals to keep out of her way. When the hunter tells her to


go home, she firmly states that she is going to town, not home. "I bound to


go to town, mister," said Phoenix. "The time come around (161)."


The hunter mistakenly concludes that the old woman is going to town to see


Santa. Phoenix does not know why she is going to town either, but that does not


keep her from getting there. Even though the trail is treacherous for someone


her age, she is determined to get where she has to go. Phoenix’s purpose is to


get medication for her grandson who swallowed lye a few years earlier. "Old


Phoenix Jackson makes her journey on "The Worn Path" to fetch the


"soothing medicine" for her little grandson (DLB 526). When Phoenix


reaches her destination, she informs the attendant of her presence but forgets


why she is there. "With her hands on her knees, the old woman waited,


silent, erect and motionless, just as if she were in armor (163)." After a


few minutes, the nurse reminds Phoenix of her purpose and her face lights up.


"I remembers so plain now. I not going to forget him again, no, the whole


enduring time (164)." Phoenix apologizes for being forgetful and vows to


never forget her grandson again. The nurse hands Phoenix the medicine and she


strains her eyes in an attempt to see the label. The attendant offers Phoenix a


few pennies. "It’s Christmas time, Grandma, said the attendant. Could I


give you a few pennies out of my purse (164)?" But the witty old woman cons


the nurse out of a nickel instead. Phoenix taps her makeshift cane and readies


to leave. She has already decided on how she is going to spend her "newly


found" treasure. "I going to the store and buy my child a little


windmill they sells, made out of paper. He going to find it hard to believe


there such a thing in the world (164)." Knowing that it is Christmas, the


loving grandmother is going to buy a gift for her grandson. "Phoenix’s act


of love and compassion is primary to the story: the deep-grained habit of love (CLC


419)." Indeed, Phoenix’s love for her only living relative is her greatest


strength of all. Although the ragged old woman suffers from many handicaps, she


starts her journey mentally prepared for the obstacles awaiting her. Phoenix


summons her inner strengths and prevails over every barrier. She relies on her


trustworthy feet to make up for her impaired vision. Her wit makes up for her


frail body. Her determination makes up for her aged memory. But most of all, her


love for her grandson her keeps her going. Clearly, the frail, forgetful,


stubborn and loving old woman can overcome anything.


Ford, Richard. "Bonhomie For A Southern Belletrist." New Yorker 19


Feb. 1996: 36. Phillips, Robert L. Jr. Contemporary Literary Criticism: Eudora


Welty. vol. 33. ed. Daniel G Marowski. Detroit: Gale Research Company, 1985.


419. Vande Kieft, Ruth. Dictionary of Literary Biography: Eudora Welty. vol. 2.


ed. Jeffrey Helterman. Michigan: Gale Research, 1978. 524-526. Welty, Eudora.


"A Worn Path." Literature for Composition. 4th ed. Ed. Sylvan Barnet


et al. New York: HarperCollins, 1996. 158-164.

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