Ames who is confined to a marriage in which there is neither respect nor communication. Mrs. Ames and her husband, the Astronomer, have an estranged marriage in which the Astronomer spends a majority of his time either on the roof or sleeping. He hardly ever seems to acknowledge his wife, and when he does, Mrs. Ames returns “in gratitude to the long expanses of his silence” (64). For example, when the plumber comes to inspect the house, Mrs. Ames is very considerate of her husband and tries to be quiet as possible to refrain from waking him up; however, the Astronomer seems to care very little for his wife, even going as far as to insult her saying how a clogged toilet is “worthy of your mettle” (64). For a majority of the interaction between the plumber and his wife, the Astronomer stays silent but just as he starts to realize how respectful the plumber is acting towards his wife, he decides to make a jab at her to embarrass and humiliate her. Such humiliation takes its toll on Mrs. Ames, to the point where when she does her daily exercises, she chants “left, left, left my wife and fourteen children, right, right, right in the middle of the dusty road” (62). This chant is very derogatory towards women as it condones men leaving their wives and children, yet Mrs. Ames is the one chanting it which insinuates that she no longer has any respect for herself. For the longest time, Mrs. Ames has lived believing that “Man might be the new arching wave, and woman the undertow that sucked him back” (62), but when she meets the plumber she learns that is not necessarily the case. Through talking with the plumber, Mrs. Ames has an epiphany in which she realizes that there are two types of men, men like her husband that “had always gone up, as the dead go” and men like the plumber, “that went down, like the corporal being of the dead,” (65). Through meeting the plumber, Mrs. Ames now knows that her only option is not a
Ames who is confined to a marriage in which there is neither respect nor communication. Mrs. Ames and her husband, the Astronomer, have an estranged marriage in which the Astronomer spends a majority of his time either on the roof or sleeping. He hardly ever seems to acknowledge his wife, and when he does, Mrs. Ames returns “in gratitude to the long expanses of his silence” (64). For example, when the plumber comes to inspect the house, Mrs. Ames is very considerate of her husband and tries to be quiet as possible to refrain from waking him up; however, the Astronomer seems to care very little for his wife, even going as far as to insult her saying how a clogged toilet is “worthy of your mettle” (64). For a majority of the interaction between the plumber and his wife, the Astronomer stays silent but just as he starts to realize how respectful the plumber is acting towards his wife, he decides to make a jab at her to embarrass and humiliate her. Such humiliation takes its toll on Mrs. Ames, to the point where when she does her daily exercises, she chants “left, left, left my wife and fourteen children, right, right, right in the middle of the dusty road” (62). This chant is very derogatory towards women as it condones men leaving their wives and children, yet Mrs. Ames is the one chanting it which insinuates that she no longer has any respect for herself. For the longest time, Mrs. Ames has lived believing that “Man might be the new arching wave, and woman the undertow that sucked him back” (62), but when she meets the plumber she learns that is not necessarily the case. Through talking with the plumber, Mrs. Ames has an epiphany in which she realizes that there are two types of men, men like her husband that “had always gone up, as the dead go” and men like the plumber, “that went down, like the corporal being of the dead,” (65). Through meeting the plumber, Mrs. Ames now knows that her only option is not a