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Pollyanna by eleanor h porter
Pollyanna by eleanor h porter







pollyanna by eleanor h porter

A comforting message on the eve of a world war Optimistic Quotes from Pollyanna - and on Being “a Pollyanna” Soon, Pollyanna is spreading her glad game to the resident of the dour Vermont town in which she now lives, transforming it into a joyous place to live. Had her aunt given her a mirror, she would have to look at her freckles.” If she had a nice bedroom, she probably wouldn’t notice the beautiful trees outside her window.

pollyanna by eleanor h porter

“The glad game shields her from her aunt’s stern attitude: when Aunt Polly puts her in an ugly attic room with no pictures, rugs or mirrors, she is glad for it. In this essay, Jurrian Kamp muses on Pollyanna’s approach to life: No problem for her - she determines to enjoy the bread and milk and to like the servant. Once she is living with her stern aunt, she is punished for being late for dinner and is relegated to eating bread and milk in the kitchen with the servant. So when Pollyanna got a pair of crutches for Christmas instead of the doll she longed for, she decided to be glad that she didn’t need the crutches. Pollyanna and her departed father had devised a “glad game,” wherein they would try to find the silver lining in any situation, no matter how dire. This follows on the trope of another ebullient orphan of that era, Anne Shirley, better known as Anne of Green Gables(1908), who melts the heart of the stereotypical spinster who adopts her.

pollyanna by eleanor h porter

Though intended as a children’s novel, it appealed to all ages.Įleven-year-old Pollyanna Whittier, one of a legion of literary orphans, is sent to live with her aunt Polly, an icy spinster. Pollyanna, subtitled “The Glad Book,” was incredibly successful from the start, and inspired many adaptations in other media. Most everyone knows what defines a “Pollyanna” - someone who looks at the bright side of things no matter how dire, or who paints an overly optimistic picture of any situation. Porter (1868 – 1920) is perhaps less familiar now than the lasting expression that grew from its sentimental story.









Pollyanna by eleanor h porter