Student Question
What contrasts exist between the aunts' beliefs and reality in "The Night the Bed Fell"?
Quick answer:
The aunts in "The Night the Bed Fell" have beliefs that starkly contrast with reality. Aunt Clarissa Beall is convinced she will die on South High Street due to significant life events occurring there, yet this is described as a "quirk." Aunt Gracie Shoaf believes in frequent burglar visits, despite no thefts, claiming to scare them off with shoes. Aunt Sarah Shoaf irrationally fears chloroform attacks, though neither burglary nor such attacks occur, highlighting exaggerated fears.
Old Aunt Clarissa Beall can not only whistle like a man, with two fingers in her mouth, but also subscribes to the firm conviction that she is destined to die on South High Street. Her rationale for this strange notion is that she was born on South High Street, got married on South High Street, and so will one day die on South High Street. We never get to find out if Aunt Clarissa's premonition ever comes true. But the fact that the narrator describes her belief as a "crotchet" or quirk would seem to suggest that it doesn't.
Then there's Aunt Gracie Shoaf, who's got it into her head that burglars have been creeping around her house for the last forty years. If so, they must be the world's most incompetent burglars, because they never actually steal anything. But Aunt Gracie has an answer for that: she says that she always scares them off before they can take anything. Apparently, she does this by throwing shoes at them down the hallway.
Aunt Sarah Shoaf deals with the fear of burglary in a rather different way. She piles up all her valuable belongings outside her bedroom door with a note attached saying "This is all I have. Please take it and do not use your chloroform, as this is all I have." Aunt Sarah's worried that as well as being burgled, she'll have chloroform blown at her through the door. That neither this terrible experience nor the theft of her goods appears as yet to have happened would seem to suggest that Aunt Sarah's fears are somewhat exaggerated, to say the least.
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