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Tuesday, 19 March 2019

The Duchess and the Jeweller :: Literary Analysis, Virginia Woolf

The Duchess and the Jeweller by Virginia Woolf is a short story about Oliver, a poor opus who has pay back a successful jeweler, and his interaction with a Duchess. In the story, Oliver struggles with the Duchess all over favorable power, where she has the ability to cheat him by change him fake pearls in sub for a weekend spent with her daughter whom he is in cacoethes with a classic battle of the sexes. While the conflict between human being and fair sex is evident, Virginia Woolf uses flashback, point of view and imagery to also convey the fight between the ample and the poor. Oliver is first introduced as a man who lives rattling well with the right brandies, whiskeys and liqueurs (Woolf 90), in a house where a more(prenominal) central position could not be imagined (90). He is a man of power who has his breakfast brought in on a try by a manservant (90) and receives invitations from duchesses, countesses, viscountesses and Honourable Ladies (90). When the Duch ess first arrives to see him, he has her ask for hug drug minutes, displaying that he, a jeweller, has the authority to make her wait. However, Woolf uses flashback to display the underlying battle of the rich and the poor. The reader sees that Oliver came from less fortunate roots where he sold stolen dogs and audacious watches. While superficially it may seem that he has the Duchess of Lambourne, daughter of a hundred Earls ( 93) wait because he has the masculine power to have her wait to see him, Woolf introduces the idea that Oliver, the impecunious boy who earned his wealth, has the Duchess, a woman whose wealth was inherited, wait for his pleasure. While we see the struggle of control between Oliver and the Duchess, the reader also observes Olivers mothers dominance over him. Using flashback, Woolf shows that as a child when he was swindled small-arm selling stolen dogs, his mother disapprovingly wails, Oh, Oliver When will you have sense, my son? (90). Later, Oliver talks to a picture of his mother saying, I have won my bet (91) while reminiscing about his past as a indigent boy in a filthy little alley (90) and reflecting on his success. This shows that he has something to sanction to his mother, that he is still constrained by her and her thoughts of him.

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