Thursday, April 16, 2020
Religion Essays (719 words) - Stephen Crane, Repentance, Blue Hotel
  Religion    Role  It is not surprising for an author's background and surroundings to profoundly  affect his writing. Having come from a Methodist lineage and living at a time  when the church was still an influential facet in people's daily lives,    Stephen Crane was deeply instilled with religious dogmas. However, fear of  retribution soon turned to cynicism and criticism of his idealistic parents'    God, "the wrathful Jehovah of the Old Testament", as he was confronted  with the harsh realities of war as a journalistic correspondent. Making  extensive use of religious metaphors and allusions in The Blue Hotel (1898),    Crane thus explores the interlaced themes of the sin and virtue. Ironically,  although "he disbelieved it and hated it," Crane simply "could  not free himself from" the religious background that haunted his entire  life. His father, a well-respected reverend in New Jersey, advocated Bible  reading and preached "the right way." Similarly, his mother, who  "lived in and for religion," was influential in Methodist church  affairs as a speaker and a journalist in her crusade against the vices of her  sinful times . This emotional frenzy of revival Methodism had a strong impact on  young Stephen. Nonetheless, he -- falling short of his parents' expectations  on moral principles and spiritual outlook -- chose to reject and defy all those  abstract religious notions and sought to probe instead into life's realities.    Moreover, Crane's genius as "an observer of psychological and social  reality" was refined after witnessing battle sights during the late 19th  century. What he saw was a stark contrast of the peacefulness and morality  preached in church and this thus led him to religious rebelliousness. As a  prisoner to his surroundings, man (a soldier) is physically, emotionally, and  psychologically challenged by nature's indifference to humankind. For  instance, in the story, "what traps the Swede is his fixed idea of his  environment," but in the end, it is the environment itself -- comprised of  the Blue Hotel, Sculley, Johnnie, Cowboy Bill, the Easterner, and the saloon  gambler -- that traps him. To further illustrate how religion permeated into    Crane's writing, many scenes from The Blue Hotel can be cited. Similar to the  biblical Three Wise Men, three individuals out of the East came traveling to    Palace Hotel at Fort Romper. The issue explored is the search for identity and  the desire of an outsider (the Swede) to define himself through conflict with a  society. Referring then to the martyr-like Swede, who is convinced that everyone  is against him, the Easterner says "... he thinks he's right in the  middle of hell". On the contrary, the Blue Hotel can be seen as a church,  with its proprietor Patrick Scully who looks "curiously like an old  priest" and who vows that "a guest under my roof has sacred  privileges". Personification of a wrathful God is portrayed when the guests  are escorted through the portals of a room that "seemed to be merely a  proper temple for an enormous stove...humming with god-like violence".    Additionally, alluding to baptism, the guests then formed part of a "series  of small ceremonies" by washing themselves in the basins of water. To  further prove the innocence of his building, Scully points out the pictures of  his little girl on the wall. All in all, in contrast to the safe haven of the  hotel, the reality is that "hell" turns out to be the red-lighted town  saloon where the Swede is eventually murdered. Another recurring topic in    Crane's writing is the responsibility for a man's death. For not acting upon  his knowledge of Johnnie's sin (his lying and cheating at the card game), the    Easterner is portrayed as a betrayer, with guilt eating him inside. At the  beginning, no one at the hotel would discuss fear or death with the Swede. Thus,  in repentance on his part, the Easterner comments, "Every sin is the result  of a collaboration". Indeed, in the end, the conspiracy of silence between  the 5 men involved in the murder leads to a brutal result: The Swede  "losses fear and gains death". A rhetorical question is left then for  the reader to reflect upon, posed innocently by the Cowboy, "Well, I  didn't do anythin', did I?". In conclusion, it can be seen that --  through the exploration of responsibility, guilt, betrayal, and repentance --    Stephen Crane develops the theme that man is alone in a hostile society and  nature. The virtuous religious dogmas cannot always explain and help make sense  of the cruel realities that each of us faces. Thus, it is only through trusting  "the God of [one's] inner thoughts" that one can    
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