The narratives of both "Bliss" and Mrs.
Dalloway cover a day in the life of the heroine and both center on the day's
major event, that being a dinner party hosted by the heroine. In "Bliss," Bertha goes
through her day with a wonderful sense of peace and happiness. She contemplates the pear
tree in her garden and sees that its beauty symbolizes her life and her expansive
happiness. While she admires the projection of herself in her pear tree, cats run across
the yard, and Bertha views their presence as a marring
one.
In contrast, Mrs. Dalloway goes
through her day in a contemplative mood, not exactly unhappy but thoughtful. At home,
she has words with her daughter, has to mend her dress, and is surprised by the visit of
a past suitor.
After Bertha's dinner party, during which
she is filled with a wonderful sense of happiness with her life and husband, she
unhappily discovers that her husband is having an affair with the woman whom she has
just shared a special bond with--the woman named Pearl. Her first instinct is to run to
the window to look out at her pear tree, seemingly expecting to see it withered and
dead. However it looks just as it did when she shared the bond of the beauty of it with
Pearl earlier.
Similarly, Mrs. Dalloway is exceptionally
pleased with the progress of her dinner party, feeling that her hostessing of parties
such as these fills a good service in the lives of her guests. She too receives a shock
in the news of the violent and sudden self-inflicted death of a young man (ironically
one she had shared a park with earlier in the day). However, Mrs. Dalloway's party ends
with self-confirmation rather than self-deterioration because she confirms her choices
in life and reappears at her party after retreating for a moment of adjustment to the
entrance of death at her party. The narrative ends with the confirming statement: "For
there she was."
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