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Gardens Symbolism

Submitted by applebonker on September 28, 2006

Category: English
Words: 2236 | Pages: 9
Views: 329
Popularity Rank: 28,545
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Gardens in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Rappaccini’s Daughter,” John Steinbeck’s “The Chrysanthemums,” and Xiaoping Zhu’s “Chronicle of Mulberry Tree Village”
Hawthorne’s “Rappaccini’s Daughter,” Steinbeck’s “The Chrysanthemums,” and Zhu’s “Chronicle of Mulberry Tree Village” feature a garden, which symbolizes a character’s inner turmoil by drawing parallels between their repression and the gardens they have created in order to facilitate a façade of internal harmony. The symbolic history of gardens begins with nearly every culture’s creation story. Eden, as it is called in Christian theology, was a paradise created to house one man and one woman, perfect and without sin. Their souls untarnished, they were able to live in utopia until their inevitable fall, after which the garden became their veritable enemy. No longer were they able to cull food from it easily or to use it as they had before. Their sin had separated their souls, and therefore their entire selves from the garden. The tradition of linking the soul and the garden was continued in early China, beginning with the Zen priests who used gardens to symbolize the inner peace they strived to attain. Centuries later, the French built gardens as symbols of their decadence; within the walls of these luxurious gardens they would hide personal artifacts, which were supposed to tie their soul to the garden in order that they may achieve the same harmony.
The tradition continues in literature. The garden of a character is often symbolic of the character’s spirituality such as it is in “Rappaccini’s Daughter,” “The Chrysanthemums,” and “Chronicle of Mulberry Tree Village.” Each of these stories is about the emotional journey of a
specific character. Yet, they each begin with a physical description of the garden, or the area surrounding it, immediately drawing the reader’s attention to the importance of the physical. The writers have already alerted the reader to the fact that...

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