Maggie A Girl of the Streets













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 Maggie A Girl of the Streets
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| Chapter 8 |
During the week following her
outing with Pete, Maggie forms a dislike for her old worn clothes and begins to
envy the fine adornments and mannerisms of the women she sees in the street.
She believes these women to be completely happy. She also considers her
workplace from a new perspective and worries that it is only a matter of time
before she becomes one of the shriveled petty women who gripe and gossip their
way through the dreary workday. She begins to loathe the sight of the fat
foreigner who is her boss at the factory. She longs for a confidant but her
mother is usually drunk and spends her sober moments taking things to the
pawnbrokers. Her brother Jimmie only comes to the apartment when completely
inebriated and lacks a better place to pass the night. Maggie and Pete begin
to go out regularly. He takes her to a dime museum full of freaks and they
spend several Sunday afternoons at the Central Park Menagerie and the Museum of Arts. Normally Pete doesn't take much interest in their surroundings but he is
impressed one day at the Menagerie by a small monkey that is threatening to
fight a cage full of larger monkeys. At the museum Pete ignores the exhibits
and spends his time there trying to stare down the guard. He does, however,
take some pleasure in moralizing over the mummies, but more often than not is
annoyed by the displays - particularly one of hundreds of jugs in a row that
serves no purpose that he can see. Most of all Maggie enjoys going to see
melodramatic plays in which the beautiful heroine is inevitably rescued from
her cruel guardian by a hero with beautiful sentiments. Maggie is like most of
the audience who, whether they were given to vice or not, universally approves
of virtuous acts on the stage, boos and hisses the evil characters and
identifies wholly with the unfortunate characters going so far as to mourn
openly when calamity befalls a lost soul. These plays typically follow the
hero's progress from poverty to wealth and triumph. The plays lead Maggie to
think that perhaps her own life could be improved in a similar manner.
Analysis of Chapter 8
This chapter details the
growth of Pete and Maggie's relationship. It's obvious he enjoys taking her to
see what he considers respectable and edifying pass times but it is also
obvious that he cares little for such diversions himself. Rather he derives
pleasure from impressing her with his supposed worldliness. As evidenced by
his disdain for the antique jugs on display in the museum he is much more
concerned with showing off to Maggie than he is in broadening his own
worldview. The details regarding the melodramatic plays marks the second time in
the novel that Crane uses a show to characterize Maggie's psychological
changes. In this case the play demonstrates to Maggie that her life is truly
bereft of tenderness and that a hero, preferably someone who has also
experienced hardship, can save her from a life of despair and hardship.
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