The Chrysanthemums
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The Chrysanthemums is a short story by John Steinbeck, written in 1937, about the happenings of one day in the life of a thirty-five year old woman named Elisa Allen.
[edit] Plot Summary
Elisa Allen and her husband Henry live peacefully on their farm in the Salinas Valley; he is busy with his orchard and steers and she with her housekeeping and flower garden. While tending to her garden, Elisa encounters a tinker who passes by their farm, first asking for work fixing cutlery and pans, and then inquiring about chrysanthemums in her garden. He asks for some seeds to take to another lady who asked him for some once. Elisa is happy to give young seeds to the tinker, and goes into great detail when she explains how to care for them. Elisa connects with the tinker and realizes that her stationary life may not be as satisfying as she thought it was. When the tinker leaves with the potted seeds Elisa gave him, she feels uplifted. She goes inside and gets dressed up to go out with Henry later on. However, her mood is reversed. In the car on the way to town, she sees the chrysanthemum shoots she'd given the tinker thrown carelessly on the road. She realizes that the tinker had lied to her just to flatter her into giving him some business (before the tinker left, Elisa let him fix a few old,dented pans), and also that he had kept the pot, throwing away only the plants. She is dismayed and cries when the car her husband is driving passes the tinker's wagon.
[edit] Sexual frustration
Some interpret certain aspects of the story as pointing to sexual frustration on Elisa's part. It could be interpreted that she and her husband sleep in separate bedrooms, however, it does not directly say this in the text. She makes a couple of subtle passes at the handyman, but is rejected. References to seeds and flowers throughout the story may be interpreted as symbols of sexuality and fertility. Many readers note, though, that Henry is not insensitive or unloving. He compliments her gardening skills. He takes her out to dinner, and offers a low-key compliment about how she is dressed. He also offers sympathy by patting her on the knee when she becomes upset upon seeing the chrysanthemum shoots on the road.
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