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- 11L2
- English
-
- The Ballad of the Sad Cafe by Carson McCullers is a story of
- love illustrated through the romantic longings and attractions of
- the three eccentric characters; Miss Amelia, Cousin Lymon, and
- Marvin Macy. McCullers depicts love as a force, often strong
- enough to change people's attitudes and behaviors. Yet, the author
- seems to say, if the love is unrequited, individuals, having lost
- their motivation to change, will revert back to their true selves.
- The allure of the different characters, which is never revealed by
- the author, seems to indicate that feelings of love and attraction
- are not necessarily reasonable or understandable to others.
- Miss Amelia is self-reliant, outspoken and very much a loner.
- She stands six foot one inch tall and has a strong, masculine
- build. Her grey eyes are crossed, and the rest of her features are
- equally unattractive. Yet, the people of the small, southern town
- of Cheehaw accept her quirkiness because of the equisite wine that
- she sells in her store and for her free doctoring and homemade
- remedies. Still, everyone is shocked when the handsome outlaw,
- Marvin Macy, falls in love with her.
- Marvin is a "bold, fearless, and cruel" man who changes his
- unlawful ways to win Miss Amelia's love. Rather than robbing
- houses he begins attending church services on Sunday mornings. In
- an effort to court Miss Amelia, he learns proper etiquette, such as
- "rising and giving his chair to a lady, and abstaining from
- swearing and fighting". Two years after Marvin's reformation, he
- asks Miss Amelia to marry him. Miss Amelia does not love him but
- agrees to the marriage in order to satisfy her great-aunt. Once
- married, Miss Amelia is very aloof towards her husband and refuses
- to engage in marital relations with him. After ten days, Miss
- Amelia ends the marriage because she finds that she is unable to
- generate any positive feelings for Marvin. Several months after
- the divorce, Marvin reverts back to his initial corrupt ways and is
- "sent to a state penitentiary for robbing filling stations and
- holding up A & P stores".
- Just as love had changed Marvin, so too did it change Miss
- Amelia. In the mid 1930's, several years after Miss Amelia's
- divorce, Lymon, a hunchback, comes to Miss Amelia claiming to be a
- distant cousin. She readily provides Cousin Lymon with food and
- board, and eventually any material object that he desires. The
- people of the town grow very curious of her new guest and of Miss
- Amelia's hospitality towards Lymon which is contrary to her
- characteristic untrusting and remote ways. The townspeople gather
- in her store one evening to meet Cousin Lymon. Unlike Miss Amelia,
- Cousin Lymon is very sociable and enjoys entertaining the townsfolk
- with his patently tall tales. In a short period of time, Miss
- Amelia's store is converted into a cafe where people gather for
- food, drink, and gossip. They would discuss Miss Amelia's love for
- Cousin Lymon, indicating that they thought love between cousins is
- forbidden and incestuous.
- Her changed behavior, in Lymon's presence, preoccupied and
- baffled them. Ever since Cousin Lymon's appearance, Miss Amelia
- would regularly wear a red dress that had been worn exclusively on
- Sundays. They also noted that, before he arrived, she would only
- leave her house to go to church or to pick up supplies for her
- store. While, when Cousin Lymon moves in, realizing that he loves
- to travel, she would often drive with him into the city and go to
- see "movie-flicks" with him.
- Before the story ends, Marvin Macy is released from prison and
- returns to Cheehaw. Cousin Lymon, unaware of Miss Amelia's short-
- lived marriage to the criminal is fascinated by Marvin's
- adventurous life. He leaves Miss Amelia, never having returned her
- love, to travel with Marvin. Broken-hearted, Miss Amelia returns
- to her original reclusive style of living.
- The Ballad of the Sad Cafe enjoyably and precisely portrays
- the irrational nature of love in the ill-fated love triangle of
- Miss Amelia, Cousin Lymon, and Marvin Macy. None of the three
- characters are portrayed as particularly appealing people, yet they
- were loved. People love for very different reasons, " A most
- mediocre person can be the object of a love which is wild,
- extravagant, and beautiful as the poison lillies of the swamp."
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- The Ballad of the Sad Cafe
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- Story by: Carson McCullers
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- Copyright date: 1951
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