Реферат: Eudora Welty Her Life And Her Works
In the story “The Wide Net,” once again Welty uses the theme love.
William Wallace loves his wife greatly but he decides to go drinking with the
boys and stay out one whole night. To get even with her insensitive husband,
Hazel Wallace writes a suicide note and hides. When William Wallace reads the
note he and his buddies set out to find Hazel’s body in the river. During his
expedition, William fantasizes of his wife and how much he really loves her.
“William Wallace looked down as though he thought of Hazel with the shining eyes,
sitting at home and looking straight before her, like a piece of pure gold, too
precious to touch” (Welty,176). After the long day of dragging the river
looking for his wife, William returns home to find his wife safe. The whole
experience teaches each of them a lesson about love.
“Through dream, as through art, man can express and realize his secret self:
through love, as through art, he can communicate that secret self to others: for
art she believes is the power to convey love”(Kramer, 329). The realistic
qualities of Welty’s work help it to be extremely believable. The feelings and
expressions she catches on paper are profound. Love which is the most difficult
emotion to define is clearly illustrated in Welty’s works. Her great
imagination and ability to look at ordinary human activity in a different light
sets Miss Welty apart from many other writers, “She participates in life around
her with such perception and fidelity that she catches it exact, and then she
colors it and carves it into an entity beyond the realism of daily life, which
is just what the people of her region have done with the often shallow and
monotonous basic material of their lives”(Kramer,329).
Welty’s poetic style and understanding of human life are obviously a
brilliant combination. She uses love, community and communication for the basis
of many of her stories. Another common technique she uses is to employ her home
state of Mississippi as the setting for her stories. By doing this, she can
write in diction that she knows; as well as being able to create both black and
white southern characters for her fiction. Welty’s characters are authentically