A Comparison Of The Attitudes To Fear In
Essay by 24 • October 3, 2010 • 1,197 Words (5 Pages) • 1,695 Views
This essay will begin to look at the stories, 'The Darkness Out There' and 'The Red Room.' Both of these stories seem to hold at first glance similar themes but closer reading and analysis show the reader that there are different attitudes to the main theme fear.
This essay will try and take the main ideas and compare the differences in attitude towards ghosts, fear of the supernatural and the state of mind of the main characters through the author's use of language.
The emotion fear, is found quit differently between the two stories, The Darkness Out There is set in an area in the woods, its an area where people do not want to go alone this means that people are scared of the area. However, The Red Room The Red Room, is a room in an old house, it's a room that frightens people hence, people do not want to go into the red room.
The people living around each place have their own myths and stories of the supernatural. In The Darkness Out There, little children made up stories that there were witches and wolves at Packers End. Even the main character, who doesn't believe in witches and wolves anymore, but is still frightened of it for other reasons such as rapists / killers which are defined as prowling blokes / gypsy type blokes. Adults however tend to believe that they could hear German's talking on their radios and that voices came out of branches. In The Red Room however only, the old people that live in the house have stories to tell they believe that the red room is haunted.
A major similarity between both stories is the fact that no one has actually seen any of the things that the people are afraid of. However, the attitudes in response to the myths for both characters are completely different. In The Darkness Out There, the main character is also frightened of the myths told and believes them whereas in THE Red Room, H.G. Wells has portrayed the main character as not scared and he uses phrases such as 'it would take a very tangible ghost to frighten me' and 'if I see anything tonight, I shall be so much the wiser. For I come to the business with an open mind' to describe his bravery.
In The Darkness Out There the history of Packers End is told by Mrs Rutter, the writer has chosen the history to be told by an elderly woman to young children this is aimed to frighten the children more, she also
shows confidence 'if your nervy you get bothered about things like Packers End' and is not scared of the area, which may also be intimidating. However, in The Red Room old people that have lived in the house tell the history. The main character does not seem to believe them and feels that the old people are trying to enhance the spiritual terrors of their house by their droning insistence. He thinks the human qualities seem to drop from old people day by day and feels that they make him feel uncomfortable and would rather be in the red room for his own comfort. His overall attitude to fear is disbelief. This may be due to the time period in which the book was written. The main characters feelings may be due to the lack of belief in general to ghosts in that period of time.
The descriptions of both places have been well described and it feels as if the author is using language and words to show fear. In The Darkness Out There the area is described as a rank place with crumbling rusty scraps of metal and cloth....and bones, whereas in The Red Room the room is described as the author enters it: 'chilly, echoing passage', 'furniture belonged to another age, an older age, an age when things spiritual were different from this of ours, an age when omens and witches were credible and ghosts beyond denying', 'the ornaments and conveniences of the room about them were ghostly - the thoughts of vanished men, which still haunted rather than participated in the world of today' and basically the character was shown to be in a state of considerable nervous tension as a result of looking at the
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