Sunday, August 4, 2019
The Withered Arm by Thomas Hardy and Farthing House by Susan Hill :: Thomas Hardy Farthing House Hill essays
The Withered Arm by Thomas Hardy and Farthing House by Susan Hill      I am going to be comparing two short stories; The withered arm by  Thomas Hardy, which was written before 1900 and Farthing house by  Susan Hill which was written more recently. The themes in each of the  two stories are quite similar. They are both based around women, their  needs and their wants and illegitimate children. Both stories have  obvious similarities especially with the types of women in the story.    'The withered arm' was a story written before 1900. At the time when  The Withered Arm was written, there was a very high child mortality  rate. Babies died at an early age due to poor health care and repeated  pregnancies. Many women died during childbirth. There were some forms  of birth control but they were condemned by the church.    Society believed that a woman's main purpose in life was marriage and  motherhood. For many, this was not possible. There was a high  mortality rate amongst male babies, early death amongst adult males  and emigration among marriageable young men.    There were hierarchies in society. Quite often, rich males would  commit adultery with poor, working females. Once the woman got  pregnant, she would be left on her own as marriage was not possible.  Single mothers would then become outcasts in society. Generally,  people knew what was happening. They were against sex outside marriage  but they did nothing to stop it.    Now in the 21st century, the roles of women have changed. They are no  longer expected to just get married and have children. There is more  equality in today's society. Although women still get married, they  are also allowed a career and life of their own. They have more  freedom and independence. There is better health care and birth  control but sex outside marriage still continues. Today, there are  many single mothers. Although they are no longer the outcasts they  once were, they still have not been entirely accepted by everyone and  are sometimes treated as inferiors and thought of as sluts.    In the Withered Arm, Rhoda Brook, a poor, once beautiful, milkmaid was  used by the rich farmer Lodge. After she became pregnant, she was  tossed aside like some used toy. Lodge wanted nothing to do with her.  He was rich, she was poor; there was no way they could marry. Rhoda  had a child without a husband. Everyone in their village knew about  the affair but did nothing to help. They knew that Rhoda had been used  and then discarded of but still continued to treat her as an outcast  in society. She was the thing to gossip about when there was nothing    					    
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