Colors Stephen Crane was as
much an impressionist as a realist and he regularly employed colors as symbolic
representations of a particular mood or context to connect a particular
sequence of events in his stories. For instance, Maggie and Jimmie cower in
the apartment and fearfully watch their sleeping mother's red hued face. Crane
describes the red glowing light from the stove as suffusing the room with a
hellish atmosphere. The red light from the stove and the alcoholic tinge of
red in their mother's cheeks combine to impress the reader with the fear,
violence and vulnerability that mark Maggie and Jimmie's childhood. By
contrast, Maggie's innocence and naivete is typically described as pale in color.
The prostitute Nell, for instance, refers to Maggie as "a little pale thing
with no spirit." Maggie romantically imbues Pete with golden colors as when she
imagines the "golden glitter of the place where Pete was to take her."
Maggie's idealized vision of Pete's golden devotion turns out to be gilded,
however, when he rejects her for Nell. Crane also uses color, specifically
light and shade, to good effect in chapter seventeen. Maggie proceeds through
the city from the well-lit areas around the theaters to the darkness of the
docks where the blackness of the river signifies death.
Theater as Life / Life as Theater - Melodramatic devices figure prominently in the novel's
final chapter in which Mary receives news of her daughter's death. With the
neighbors as her audience and Mrs. Smith in the role of confessor, Mary
dramatically comes to the conclusion that she must forgive her dead daughter
for her sins. The author writes that: "The inevitable sunlight came streaming
in at the windows and shed a ghastly cheerfulness upon the faded hues of the
room." The obvious references to low theater - the "inevitable" beam of
sunlight for instance - marks the scene as a mirror for the descriptions of the
plays to which Pete takes Maggie earlier in the novel. This pairing of the
slum to the dramatic world of the stage ties the Bowery's low imitation of the
morals of middle class society to the milieu of the melodramatic play and its
ameliorative pretensions.
During the course of
the novel Crane describes three different music halls to which Pete takes
Maggie. The atmosphere of these halls acts as metaphors for the arc their
relationship. The first hall is described in chapter seven and while it is not
glamorous it is respectable, relatively clean and the stage show evokes genuine
emotional responses from the audience. At this point in their relationship
Maggie is innocently in awe of the spectacle of the hall and is flattered by
Pete's attention. Pete watches Maggie closely and seems genuinely glad that
she enjoys the show. The second dance hall (described in chapter 12) is filled
with more smoke than the first and is irregularly shaped. The stage show is
banal and features a woman who sings badly and wears progressively less
clothing. At this point in the story Maggie has left home to be with Pete and
she is obviously dependent upon him. Pete is "infinitely gracious to the girl"
and is pleased to see that other men in the hall are eyeing her closely. Thus,
their relationship, like the stage show, is somewhat riskier. The third and
final dance hall (described in chapter 14) is tawdry and full of noisy men
whose exhortations drown out the scantily clad woman singing on the stage. All
the women in the hall are prostitutes and the hall is filled with smoke. Maggie
is, at this point, completely dependent upon Pete but he chooses to give his
attention to Nell. The confusion of the hall completely matches Maggie's own
incomprehension when Pete leaves with Nell and does not return.
The Lambrequin The
ornamental hanging that Maggie purchases and places above the mantle is a
metaphor for the domestic peace completely lacking in her home. After Pete's
first visit, during which she is ashamed of the apartment, she purchases the
lambrequin in an attempt to beautify the otherwise squalid appearance of her
family's rooms. On his next visit he doesn't notice it and she is ashamed of
her attempt. Her mother belittles it and tears it from the wall during a
drunken rampage in which she denounces her daughter and urges her to leave.
Maggie realizes at this moment that her life at home offers nothing but shame
and violence. In this manner the lambrequin serves as a metaphor for what she
can never have at home.
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