Personal Narrative: Mistress Mary Quite Contrary

Decent Essays
Today I am being sent off to live with another family. At first I was sent to stay with at the English Clergyman's house and I did not like it at all. All of his children were always quarreling and and snatching toys from one another and they were always wearing shabby clothes and after two or three days no one would play with me.

To make it even worse they gave me a nickname I absolutely despised they called me "Mistress Mary Quite Contrary." and it really got on my nerves. Soon after I am sent off to live with my uncle Archibald Craven at Misselthwaite Manor in England and I don't like it at all. So I guess I will see where this adventure will take

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    During the “King Phillip’s War” many English colonist were either killed or taken captive by the Native Americans. Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, who has one of the first and well known written accounts, spent eleven weeks in captivity by the Wampanoag Indians. Rowlandson, a professed puritan, strong in her faith is put to the test during her captivity. During Rowlandson’s time with the native Indians she is introduced to an unfamiliar view of them that is against her prior knowledge that was influenced by the English colonist. A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration by Mary Rowlandson expresses two contradicting views of the Indians that shows Mary’s ambivalence.…

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    St. Helena and the Emperor Constantine Presented to the Holy Trinity by the Virgin Mary was the piece of art work that stuck out to me the most which made me choose to write my analysis essay on this amazing well thought out art work. Some of my reasoning behind choosing this piece of art is the amazing story that it shares in just one picture. Just by looking at this piece of art you can tell there is so much emotion and knowledge behind making this painting. From observing this work, it made me want to know more about what exactly is trying to be captured through a picture instead of the use of words. St. Helena and the Emperor Constantine Presented to the Holy Trinity by the Virgin Mary was created by a famous Italian rococo…

    • 1136 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Mary Prince was born in Brackish Pond, Bermuda, in 1788. Her mother was enslaved in the household of Charles Myners, and her father was a shipbuilder's sawyer. As a baby, she was sold with her mother to captain Williams, who gave her as a gift to his granddaughter. Prince served as a childhood companion to the granddaughter until age twelve, when she was hired out as a nurse to a neighboring household. After the Captain’s wife died, he sold Prince to another slave-owner in Spanish Point, Bermuda.…

    • 265 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Although this thesis is still being revised, it states: Dario Fo had political and social triggers that led him down the path to creating a more modern—and revolutionary—giullare storytelling style that is comprehensible to masses around the world. I chose my focus(es) for multiple reasons. The first is that I need to understand why he revised biblical stories and, specifically, “Mary Under the Cross”. I believe if I understand why he chose it politically and socially, I can connect to it as well and create a better final product. Additionally, it is essential that I comprehend how it was revised by Fo and—hopefully—it will be helpful to my work on the scene.…

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Imagine being captured by someone with no way of knowing if you would come back out of the situation alive. How would you feel? Most would feel terrified at that point; not knowing if they will live or die. When someone is captured by someone else and lives to tell of their story, that is called a captivity narrative. A captivity narrative explains the author's experiances of when they were kidnapped; like how they get separated from their family, not know if they will ever see them again.…

    • 1001 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In both “Half-Hanged Mary” and Jamaica Kincaid's A Small Place, the overall tone grows confrontational, and each narrator challenges their oblivious onlookers. In “Half-Hanged Mary,” after the speaker understands the unfruitful results of relying on God, she becomes resentful and believes she is above Him. When she is brought down from the noose, she recalls all the women merely staring at her, and speaks with a sarcastic tone towards the bystanders. The mockery she depicts is the same dynamic that Jamaica Kincaid describes in A Small Place. Kincaid directs to her readers that when visiting her native land, they do not think of the rotten inner functions, and are only viewers of the pretty facade.…

    • 261 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Mary Rowlandson had no choice but to adapt to the conditions of her captivity and the hard conditions of living in the wilderness. She had no prior knowledge or experience of this type of living as she explains “I was not before acquainted with such kind of doings or dangers” (494). One of Rowlandson’s first adaptions to her captivity was her eating habits, her first three weeks of captivity she barely ate a thing. She referred to the Native Americans food as “filthy trash” at first, nonetheless by the third week of her captivity she had adapted her stance of their food as “sweet and savory to my taste”. Rowlandson had to try and adapt to another culture that she viewed as completely barbarous, while trying to maintain herself as “civilized”.…

    • 978 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Mary Walcott Summary

    • 352 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The idea of witchcraft increased when friends of Betty Parris, which included eleven year-old Ann Putnam, seventeen year-old Mercy Lewis, and seventeen year-old Mary Walcott began to show similar illness and behavior as Betty. The previously held belief that witchcraft targeted children made the doctor’s diagnoses seem incredibly accurate. Tituba suggested a form of counter magic to heal the girls. She needed to bake a rye cake with the urine of the infected victim and feed the cake to a dog. (Dogs were believed to be used by witches to carry out acts of pure evil and witchery.)…

    • 352 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The fact that we are extraordinarily different makes us unique. Embracing what makes us dissimilar while others tend to feel uncomfortable becomes an advantage in today's society. “You Can Go Home Again: A Sequence” by Mary TallMountain, and “Waiting at the Edge: Words toward a Life” by Maurice Kenny both focus on a search for identity. Both individuals discover a sense of identity despite the harsh experiences at school, because of the influence of their fathers, and due to their profound love for writing.…

    • 1109 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative is made up of a hue of different voices that she uses to portray separate messages about what’s happening, what she thinks about it, and how she feels. Therefore, her captivity narrative has a varying effect on different readers. For instance, some readers may believe that Rowlandson has a very cohesive thought process throughout the whole of her captivity, because she uses these varying voices to prove one overarching theme to the reader: God provided the circumstances which gave her the ability to survive the captivity. However, other readers see several contradictions or discrepancies in the way she writes, because of the different voices she uses. For example, Rowlandson leads the reader in one direction for a passage, then she flips her writing to reflect the opposite idea.…

    • 1745 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Mary Tudor Personality

    • 1058 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Mary Tudor courageous queen or bloody Mary, she was known for her religious faith and her to bring England back to the Catholic ways. Her fellow people had mixed feelings towards their queen assuming she was the rightful heir of the throne or a devil in the discus. Mary Tudor was born in February 18, 1516. She had been the first surviving child of King Henry VIII and Queen Catherine. Her mother, Catherine had given birth to 4 children before Mary but none had survived.…

    • 1058 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The goals used for counseling Mary's case used psychoanalytic and Adlerian treatment to help build Mary emotional state. By using the psychoanalytic treatment to increase adaptive functioning help to reduces Mary’s anxiety and depression. Also, use therapeutic methods dealing with the unconscious and conscious to strengthen Mary ego so her behavior is in reality. The counselor role with the client Mary would be the blank approach and transference relationship. This will allow client Mary to free association by expressing her feelings, experiences, association, memories and fantasies.…

    • 96 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Superior Essays

    My client Pauletta Patterson is the main character in the Black Entertainment Television series Being Mary Jane. Throughout three seasons and thirty episodes many people viewed Mary Jane’s life as successful because of her financial stability. Many times when someone is financially stable everything else in his or her life is overlooked. Success to Mary Jane is not financial stability but being loved, she prefers to be married and have children as opposed to having a higher socioeconomic status. Simply put personal financial stability does not equate to a successful life.…

    • 1359 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The idea of publishing The History of Mary Prince came initially from herself. Prince aspired for her story to be told from her own mouth, so that “the good people in England might hear from a slave what a slave had felt and suffered” making sure to include the most heartbreaking and gruesome details (55). Her narrative was the first account of a black woman’s life to be published in Britain, debuting during a time when slavery was still legal. Prince writes to disprove the justification that many slave owners had for their actions: that slaves were with no wish to be free. This book had such an immense effect on Britain because it was written by a former slave, disproving the idea that slaves were not human or could not survive being free,…

    • 1298 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Feminism In The Wife Of Bath Tale

    • 1637 Words
    • 7 Pages
    • 7 Works Cited

    Jacqueline Murray, the professor of Department of History at University of Windsor, shows how women emerge in the thirteenth-century manuals as a ’marked’ category defined by their reproductive and sexual functions, viewed above all in terms of how their own sexual status (widow, wife, virgin, prostitute) contributes to the evaluation of males who commit sexual sin with them. ( 13) The Wife thinks that the virginity is not very important because our bodies were given us to use. She despises virginity but she does not tell anyone. The Wife speaks about sexuality in natural way which is very brave and unusual in her century.…

    • 1637 Words
    • 7 Pages
    • 7 Works Cited
    Great Essays