Thursday, September 19, 2019
Compare H.G. Wells The Red Room and Farthing House by Susan Hill Essay
Compare H.G. Wells' The Red Room and Farthing House by Susan Hill      "There was no mistake about it. The flame vanished, as if the wick had  been suddenly nipped between a finger and thumb, leaving the wick  neither glowing or smoking, but black." Ghost stories use dark and  fear of it as a key element, and most occurrences happen in the night,  and/or in the dark.    The aim of this essay is to compare and contrast the two short stories  - The Red Room by H.G. Wells and Farthing House by Susan Hill. The Red  Room was written pre twentieth century and Farthing house was written  post twentieth century. I will mainly look at the formulaic structure  of the stories and the tension that is built up throughout them by the  authors.    A good ghost story involves a mixture of tension and an interesting  plot or storyline. The formulaic elements - e.g. old  houses/graveyards/other sinister settings, threatening  housekeepers/guests/noises, staying overnight, dark/night, threatening  weather (e.g. storms, thunder) and a death/previous ghostly history  all help to create the genre and entice the reader to continue  reading. There should be twists in the story, to help make it more  interesting, and less predictable. There is also often a lot of  mystery involved - mysterious key characters, unknown noises and  people etc.    The Red Room is a pre-20th century story, written by H.G. Wells in  1896. It is about a room that is allegedly haunted and the story is  told by a young man who is spending the night there. He starts off  extremely confidently but as the story goes on he becomes more and  more frightened and the tension increases. The Red Room is about the  personal experience of the young man whilst in the room, and his own  fear o...              ...ing plots. Some elements of the  first formula have stuck, which is why 'The Red Room' and 'Farthing  House' are so similar, although written years apart. I think that they  have stuck because they are a winning combination that attracts  readers.    Over time ghost stories have become more popular and some stories have  also been shown as films or television programmes. This shows that  they are still a popular part of culture and probably will continue to  be in the future. Films and television programmes still often stick to  the formula - setting and history, for example. However the visual  images and plots differ. Farthing House is testimony to this, the  setting is similar but the plot and purpose differs. "I was not afraid  anymore, not now that I knew who she was and why she had been there,  getting out of her bed in Cedar room, to go in search of her baby.                        
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