Once Upon a Time
Nadine Gordimer
Once Upon a Time is an example of a frame story. The speaker starts by telling of a creaking sound that she heard.She feared that it was either a robber or a collapse in an underground gold mine that would cause her house to fall. To calm herself down so that she could sleep, she decided to tell the weirdest children's story that I have ever read. This story reflected her fears. In the story, the family took extreme measures to ensure the security of their home. Just as the speaker feared a potential burglar, the family feared the riots and burglars. This contributed to why the people in the story have security systems. In addition, the speakers fears were not an actual immediate threat to her. In a sense, she overreacted to a small sound by creating elaborate suppositions of the cause of the sound. In her story, the people also overreacted to the threat of the robbers by turning their homes into fortresses. Just as the speaker's suppositions stole from her time to sleep, the family's fear of robbers stole from them their greatest possession: their son. "...while the bleeding mass of the little boy was hacked out of the security coil with saws, wire-cutters, choppers, and they carried it-the man, the wife, the hysterical trusted housemaid and the weeping gardener- into the house"(Gordimer).
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