Wednesday, May 6, 2020

A Wedding Ceremony A Wedding Ceremony Foreshadowing Your...

â€Å"I, take you, to be my lawfully wedded husband, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish; from this day forward until death do us part.† From a young age, girls think about the perfect wedding- everything from the perfect dress to the color scheme, venue design and the cake. Every girl aspires to have the perfect wedding including a perfect balance between her modern ideas and her family’s culture and traditions. When the wedding day finally comes†¦What if the guests ignore the traditions? What if the problems at the wedding become the problems in your own life? In The Jungle, Ona and Jurgis have a disastrous wedding ceremony in which guests†¦show more content†¦The guests abuse the privilege of an open bar revealing the idea that the people attending the wedding ceremony do not abide or respect tradition but rather think only about themselves. They do not honor the wedding feast, but rather feel entitled to it. The guests getting drunk foreshadows Jurgis’s troubles with alcohol. One day after work, Jurgis goes to a saloon and discovers the drink. Consequently, â€Å"there came a time when nearly all the conscious life of Jurgis consisted of a struggle with the craving for drink. He would have ugly moods, when he hated Ona and the whole family because it so stood in his way† (Sinclair 129). Jurgis’s wedding ceremony is disastrous since the family cannot afford the enormous amount of alcohol that the guests have consumed. Due to his addiction to alcohol, his relationship with Ona is unsteady because he begins to regret his decision to marry her. For Jurgis the alcohol takes away his pain of being unable to provide for his family. Just as the guests become dull and emotionless due to a high consumption of alcohol, Jurgis becomes emotionless towards his job and his family. He no longer feels a connection to his family but instead feels a connection to alcohol. The guests and the saloon owners who take advantage of immigrants both contribute to the ruin of Ona and Jurgis’s wedding ceremony. Ona describes the saloon owner and his policy towards immigrants saying, â€Å"He wouldShow MoreRelatedThe s The Painted Veil By W. Somerset Maugham1517 Words   |  7 Pages In his The Painted Veil, W. Somerset Maugham tells a complex story that addresses sex, infidelity, marriage, personal growth, and life lessons. The tale being introduced in this literary work focuses on the primary female character, Kitty Garstin, and her husband, Walter Fane. The central focus of the story is the marriage between Garstin and Fane and how the two characters act and display their feelings towards each other. 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