Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Characters, Language and Physical Characteristics in I Never Promised Y
Characters, Language and Physical Characteristics in I  Never Promised You a Rose Garden       Ã  Ã  Ã   A past  of discomfort and sorrow, loneliness and pain shadowed an innocent girl with so  much potential. She lay broken under the weight of her own secret longing, while  no one seemed to care. Then, through a thick veil of anguish, Deborah noticed an  unfamiliar, yet inviting light sprouting from within herself. Through the open  door of this needed world Deborah ventured, drowning in her own relief. The  Kingdom of Yr, Deborah's imaginary world, was so intricately created in the  darkest corners of her mind that it became real to her. As time passed and  Deborah became more desperate for belonging, Yr's bliss was all she lived  for.     Ã       Ã  The combination of the delicacy and complexity of  the imaginary world's complications, characters, fear, love and senses creates  an inclination of Yr's reality within the reader. The secret world of Yr, which  was introduced in the book I Never Promised You a Rose Garden (1964) by Hannah  Green, deserves much consideration and attention. Its sophisticated structure  makes even the most sane of human beings question their own perception of  reality. The author brought the reality of Yr to life through three  distinguished elements: characters, language and physical characteristics. Keep  in mind, the very essence of reality is what one makes of it.     Ã       Ã  Yr portrayed several characters who harbored  realistic characteristics. Although most of the characters were considered gods,  Deborah was able to see, befriend and interact with them as if they were real  companions. Anterrabae, the Falling God, was characterized by his hair of fire  and endless decent through the dark midst of Yr. He...              ...  perfection or complete bliss, but a world of acceptance; she belonged to Yr. No  matter how hard life became for Deborah, her boundless longing for acceptance  was filled. Reality cannot be accurately described, because it is different for  everyone. Deborah's desire to belong somewhere was enough to create her own  world. For most "sane" beings of Earth, peace must stem from the satisfaction of  believing the accepted thought that our world, Earth, is the only reality.  Perhaps it is the "insane" who completely understand the essence of real life.  They are not afraid to venture beyond the burning boundaries of truth to  discover for themselves their personal reality. One can speculate that reality  is precisely what one makes of it.     Ã       Works Cited     Ã       Green, Hannah. I Never Promised You a Rose Garden. New  York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1964.     Ã                        
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