Friday, August 2, 2019
Death and Love in Little Women Essays -- Louisa May Alcott, Little Wom
à     "Four  women, taught by weal and woe To love and labor in their prime. Four sisters,  parted for an hour, None lost, one only gone..." (365-366). Jo wrote these lines  in a poem, after Beth died. This is the most significant struggle for Jo. Jo and  Beth are the two middle sisters in the classic novel, Little Women (1869)  written by Louisa May Alcott. This is a classic novel about an American family  of four daughters, a father who is off at war and a mother who works for the  food. Jo and Beth are best friends and Jo sets the example for Beth.     Beth first gets sick when Mother goes off to take care of  Father, who got seriously ill in the war. Beth comes down with scarlet fever  that she caught from the baby down the road. Beth requests that Jo stay by her  side, which she does. Beth was sicker then any one, other then the doctor and  Hannah (the servant) thought. Jo decides to send for her mother, as she can not  handle the burden by herself. Jo admits to Teddy that "Beth is my conscience and  I can't give her up. I can't! I can't!" (143) As time elapses, both Mother and  Father come home and Beth starts feeling better. Beth also starts to fall in  love with Teddy (the boy next door), who loves Jo instead. Teddy asks Jo to  marry him, she declines, for she does not love him and knows that Beth loves  him. Beth starts to become better and Jo decides that it would be a good thing  for her to move to New York, to get away from it all.     In New York, Jo lives with a family friend, and becomes  their families mistress. Jo meets Professor Fredrick Bhaer, a German teacher,  and becomes good friends. Jo forgets about the engagement proposal, but keeps in  touch with Teddy and her family. After a year, Jo gets word again that B...              ... her. She sits down and writes  a poem about her three sisters and herself. It turns out to be a beautiful poem  about their lives thus far, and what shall become of them, in her mind. After  she is done she lets her husband read it and then she burns it, as to get rid of  all the painful memories that came with the writing.     à       After Jo had got married, had her babies, and opened up  the school for the boys, she learned that every day and every person is a gift  from God. She also learned to be thankful that she had Beth for as long as she  did, and to treasure the memories. "Into each life some rain must fall, Some  days must be dark and sad and dreary" (375). Even though, Jo thought she had  lost the best thing in her life, she learned to move on.     à       Bibliography     Alcott, Louisa May. Little Women, Children's Classic  Garden City New York, 1869     à                        
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