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Second Battle Of Shiloh Essay Research Paper

Second Battle Of Shiloh Essay, Research Paper


John Gilbert


Paper One


Dr. Mosser


English 1102


6 February 2000


The Second Battle of Shiloh


The switch to college life can definitely change people. In high school, one makes


friends that will hopefully last a lifetime. Then comes senior year, and after all the college


admissions letters have been received, one must face the realization that his/her best


friends will not be by their side 24 hours a day / 7 days a week any longer. Still ecstatic by


what this new life, college, holds for them, students enter into their chosen institute of


higher learning. Do you remember that first break, or long weekend, that brings everyone


back to the place where they grew up? Its a chance to look back and catch up on old


times, even though you?ve only been separated for a month or two. Whether coming


home from UGA, Tech, or even some out-of-state college, that drive home gives one time


to reflect. Will my friends who I graduated with be the same friends who I know and


love? Like I said, college alters people, and the first time you see old friends, you might


realize that your best friends are not who they once were. Although painful, this is a


process that is natural. Friends change, and friends move on with their lives, regardless of


your presence. On a larger scale, this is the dilemma brought to the readers attention by


Bobbie Ann Mason, author of ?Shiloh?.


In Mason?s ?Shiloh?, Leroy and Norma Jean Moffitt are a married couple living in


Paducah, Kentucky. Leroy has spent the past 15 years driving a tractor-trailer across the


country. Four months ago, Leroy was involved in a highway accident that required steel


pins to be placed in his hip. He returned home to rest and rehabilitate his leg. He is


confined to his house, something that he hasn?t seen for an extended period since he?s


been on the road. Like a college student, this is Leroy?s long weekend. Leroy comes


home to his wife, Norma Jean, hoping that she will be the same person he left many years


before. Unfortunately for Leroy, Norma Jean has moved on with her life, much like


friends who move on after high school graduation. Leroy would like for things to be the


way they were, but Norma Jean has chosen a different course in her life that doesn?t


involve Leroy. She works at the Rexall Drug Store, loves to play music, and is taking


classes in composition at Paducah Community College. Bobbie Ann Mason uses literary


devices in her story to tell of the impending divorce of Leroy and Norma Jean. The use of


symbolism and foreshadowing are both used to clue the reader into the eventual fate of the


Moffitt?s marriage:


Sitting in his Paducah, Kentucky home, Leroy stares towards the backyard where


his rig is parked. He says it looks ?like a gigantic bird that has flown home to roost?


(Mason 46). This quote symbolizes that the leader of the home has returned, but sadly,


Leroy is misinformed. In fact, he is scared of what the future holds. To pass the time he


builds models from kits, including log cabins, hardly a productive activity. Sitting on the


couch he realizes that ?in all the years he as on the road he never took time to examine


anything? (Mason 46). He?s speaking about the scenery on the road but I can deduct that


in addition to scenery, Leroy neglected to examine his marriage. At this point, Leroy?s


marriage is in a irreconcilable state. The only connection Leroy can forge with his wife is


when she starts talking about cosme

tics (creams, toners, moisturizers). He also thinks


about petroleum products – axle grease and diesel fuel. Don?t get me wrong, Leroy feels


guilty about his long absences, but now that he?s home, he wishes that his wife would


celebrate his permanent homecoming more happily. This foreshadows her relative


disappointment with the marriage and its impending end. Leroy even observes that they


?sometimes feel awkward around each other? (Mason 47). This shouldn?t be the case for


a married couple of 16 years, again foreshadowing an imminent end to the marriage.


Norma Jean, in the meantime, learns to play the organ. At first she learns Christmas


songs, and then all the songs in the ?Sixties Songbook?. The only thing Leroy does in


smoke joints on the couch. He wasted one of his days buying marijuana from a kid,


further displaying is stationary and pathetic life. Norma Jean is tired of his lounging


around. One day, after watching Leroy sew a Star Trek pillow cover, she says, ?You


don?t know what to do with yourself?. This symbolizes Norma Jean?s direction in life and


Leroy?s lack of motivation to do anything productive, like try to save his marriage. There


seems to be a role reversal in this marriage, with Norma Jean occupying the masculine


role. Norma Jean has to tell Leroy to find work. She says, ?You have to find a job first?


(Mason 49), referring to Leroy?s desire to build her a log cabin. She even names off jobs


for Leroy: ?You could get a job as a guard at Union Carbide, where they?d let you set on


a stool…You could do a little carpenter work, if you want to build so bad? (Mason 49).


Leroy just says that he can?t do anything where he would have to stand up all day. In bed


that night Norma Jean closes her eyes and requests that the lights be turned out, just like


she wants the lights turned out in this marriage. Leroy still has a preoccupation with


building Norma Jean a log cabin, yet the notion of receiving a truckload of notched,


numbered logs scares him. Once again this symbolizes his fear of the future, just the


opposite of Norma Jean. Although Norma Jean is the ?king of the castle?, Leroy still


yearns for insistence that he is the man of the house. He asks Norma Jean, ?Am I still king


around here?? (Mason 53). When Norma Jean flexes her biceps she is showing Leroy that


she is the leader of the house. Leroy knows that something has to be done to save his


marriage. Mabel, Leroy?s mother-in-law, suggests they take a trip to Shiloh, a Civil War


battleground. This is ready-made symbolism. A battling couple takes a trip to a famous


battleground. Looking for a place to picnic, they sit down next to a cemetery for Union


Soldiers, which symbolizes the death of their life together as husband and wife. She tells


Leroy that she is leaving him and when she walks toward the bluff overlooking the


Tennessee River, Leroy tries to follow. His good leg, however is asleep, and his bad leg


still hurts him. This symbolizes that he will never catch her. She has her own life and he is


stuck in the same place.


In conclusion, I have personally experienced the loss of a friend after we both


embarked on different paths. Although we were the best of friends in high school, when


the time came on that long weekend to hang out, we didn?t even pick up the phone to see


what the other was doing. Although its natural to move in different directions, it still hurts


to no longer have that friend in your life any longer, just like it hurts Leroy not to have


Norma Jean


Bibliography


shiloh

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