The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug
Once Gregor decided to leave his room, he went through his double doors to hear the chief clerk exclaim a resounding âOhâ that could be heard throughout the entire house. The chief clerk had never seen anything so unusual in his life, especially a talking enormous pest. He thought, âthis must be a dream, this cannot be Gregor Samsa,â while he pressed his hands against his open mouth, he slowly retreated as if driven by an invisible force. The chief clerk thought back on his youth and how he detested insects for their dreadful appearance, especially for their numerous, undulate, hairy legs. Gregorâs mother was sitting on the couch when she saw the reaction of the chief clerk, so she unfolded her arms, rose from her seat, took two steps forward where Gregor was standing, and she immediately fell unconscious on the floor. There were no words to describe her anguish for her son turning into a household pest, all she could do was lay on the floor in utter astonishment and gloom. Gregorâs father looked hostile and clenched his fists as if wanted to knock Gregor back into his room. He could not believe that his precious, hardworking son would turn into an insect. The once strong willed lieutenant in the army was now a repulsive insect that needed to be extinguished.
âWas this the secret Gregor was hiding from us when he refuse to open his door?â thought Gregorâs father. Then, he looked uncertainly around the living room, covered his eyes with his hands and wept so that his powerful chest shook. The father was depending on Gregor to take care of the family. Not only did Gregor financially support the family but he also took care of the father and mother as they were getting older. However, these responsibilities were not of Gregorâs duties anymore because the father saw that he no longer existed anymore. âNow how is the family going to be taken cared of?â âWhat am I going to?â âHow is this vermin going to take care of me?â âHe cannot possibly be my son,â thought the father as he continue to weep all the more louder.
Gregor tried to explain to the chief clerk about his excusable tardiness for not coming to work on time but the chief clerk had turned away as soon as Gregor started to speak. He could only see Gregorâs big stature, numerous, hairy legs, moving in all directions, and his antenna moving back and forth like a pendulum of a clock. These actions made the clerk very frightened and since he could not understand most of Gregorâs speech, he thought that Gregor wanted to eat him. So, the chief clerk moved gradually to the entrance hall where he rushed forward in a panic and stretched his hands out towards the staircase in order to escape from this nightmare. âI better get out of here before he consumes every part of my flesh,â thought the chief clerk.
However, while the chief clerk made all effort to escape, Gregor realized that is was out of the question to let the chief clerk go away in this mood, especially if his position at the firm was in extreme danger of being expunged. So, without considering that he was still not familiar with how well he could move about in his present state, or that his speech might not still be understood, he let go of the door; pushed himself through the opening; tried to reach the chief clerk on the landing but immediately fell over and, with a little scream as he sought something to hold onto, landed on his numerous little legs.
As the mother witness all this, she thought of Gregorâs face as a young boy, then as a mature man. She could not believe that this vermin was her son. She closed and opened her eyes, so that Gregorâs normal body would magically reappear but it did not work. All she could see was an enormous bug. Then, in her hysteria, Gregorâs mother suddenly jumped up with her arms outstretched and her fingers spread shouting, âHelp, for pityâs sake, Help.â She hurriedly moved backwards until she reached the kitchen table and quickly sat on it without realizing that all the breakfast things were on it. She did not even seem to notice that the coffee pot on the table had been knocked over and a gush of coffee was pouring down onto the carpet.
âMother, mother,â said Gregor gently, looking up at her but he could not help himself from snapping in the air with his jaws at the sight of the flow of coffee. Mrs. Samsa saw Gregorâs movements but she could not make sense of it, so it caused her to scream anew. âOh, my God, what is he doing?â âOh, my God, I think he is going to kill me!â thought the mother as she fled from the table, and fell into the arms of Gregorâs father. The chief clerk had already reached the stairs of the entrance hall and Gregor did not want him to leave if he knew that he would be left without a job for this dreary situation, so he made a run for him. While the chief clerk tried to quickly leave he noticed that Gregorâs dome like body was shifting and his antenna was moving to his direction. He did not want to be touched by this hideous creature, so, he leapt down several steps at once and disappeared, while his shouts resounded all around the staircase. Â Gregorâs father realized that immediate action was going to have be taken to extinguish this situation. âI donât want this thing running around my house, it needs to get out,â thought the father. So, he seized the chief clerkâs stick in his right hand, picked up a large newspaper from the table with his left, and used them to drive Gregor back into his room, stamping his foot at him as he went.
Although Gregor tried to reason with his father, his father could not understand him and wanted him to leave. He no longer considered Gregor as a son but as a repulsive pest that needed to die. Across the room, Gregorâs mother could not deal with the present ordeal and felt she was going in a state of unconsciousness, so she pulled open a window, leant far out of it, and pressed her hands to her face breathing in and out.
âGet out, get out, get out, get out, get out you filthy pest,â thought Gregorâs father as he hissed and stamped his feet to drive Gregor back to his room. Gregor had never had any practice in moving backwards and was only able to go very slowly. He did not want to get a fatal blow to his back or head from the stick in his fatherâs hand, so he quickly and anxiously tried to turn himself around. As this process went very slowly, Gregorâs father was becoming impatient. âI donât want this vermin in my sight anymore,â thought the father. So, he used the tip of his stick to give directions from a distance on which way to turn as he kept hissing at Gregor to get back in his room. When Gregor had finally turned around, he was pleased that his head was in front of the doorway, but then he saw that it was too narrow, and his body was too broad to get through it without difficulty. âFinally, he is almost out of my sight, he needs to hurry up,â thought the father. In the fatherâs present mood, he did not have the idea that Gregor was unable to open the double doors. He was merely fixed on the idea that Gregor should get back into his room as quickly as possible.
As the father watched Gregor desperately trying to push himself back into his room, he became more impatient and the hissing became louder and louder in an attempt to drive Gregor all the more harder back into his room despite his current paralysis. With the little strength that Gregor had, he pushed harder into his room but then one side of his body lifted itself making him lay at an angle in the doorway. One flank of Gregorâs body was scrapped on the white door causing him to get painfully injured. His scrap left vile brown flecks on the door and soon he was stuck fast and was not able to move at all by himself; his little legs along one side hung quivering in the air while those on the other side were pressed painfully against the ground. The father could not accept Gregorâs off putting nature of being an insect and the flecks on the door made him more appalled of the situation. âThis is so horrendous, I canât take this anymore,â thought the father, so he gave a hefty shove behind Gregor and released him from where he was held. This sent Gregor flying, while heavily bleeding, deep into his room. âAnd good riddance to you,â thought the father as he slammed shut the door with his stick, and finally, all was quiet.
Comparison Essay on “The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug” and “The Metamorphosis”Â
In, The Metamorphosis, the narrator, which is a third-person limited narrator (heterodiegetic narrator), tells the story about Gregor waking up as an enormous bug. The narrator describes Gregorâs thoughts, feelings of his transformation, and analyzes what is going on outside of Gregorâs mind. However, this narration is only limited to Gregorâs thoughts. Readers are not able to hear the thoughts of Gregorâs father, mother, and the chief clerk. Readers are also not able to experience how these characters felt when they encountered Gregor as a bug for the first time. The narrator just simply spoke about what she/he saw and these characters reactions but did not give the readers access to each characterâs mind. Therefore, by retelling the story from a third-person limited narrator to a third-person omniscient narrator (heterodiegetic narrator), readers are able to see how Gregorâs mother, father, and the chief clerk had underlying fears that they were battling with as opposed to the original text.
In the retelling, The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug, the mother is portrayed as being very distraught of Gregorâs newly transformed body. When the mother had her first encounter with Gregor as a bug, she immediately âfell unconscious to the floor.â The narrator describes Mrs. Samsaâs unconsciousness as âanguish for her son turning into a household pestâ and that she felt astonished and depressed for Gregorâs situation. In, The Metamorphosis, when the mother encountered Gregor as a bug for the first time, the narrator only describes how the mother âsank to the floor into her skirts,â how the motherâs âskirt spread themselves outâ as she laid on the floor, and how her âhead disappeared down into her breastâ (Page 2, p. 2). These were all observations from the narrator of the motherâs reactions but there were no descriptions of her feelings. Moreover, in, The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug, when the mother witnessed her son falling on the ground and landing on his ânumerous, hairy legs,â the narrator got access to the motherâs thoughts by showing her reminiscing on âGregorâs face as a young boy, then as a mature man.â The retelling of the story showed us that Mrs. Samsa really cared about her son and that she wanted Gregorâs old body to return, unlike the father. However, in The Metamorphosis, when the mother saw her son crouched on the ground with his numerous little legs, the narrator just states that she âwas engrossed in herself.â The narrator does not state what she was thinking instead she/he shows the mother screaming after she has witnessed Gregorâs new body. So, in these scenes, Mrs. Samsa shows that she feared Gregorâs well-being and if Gregor was every going to return to his normal body.
As for Gregorâs father, he looked very appalled and unaccepting of Gregorâs newly transformed body in both the retelling and original story, however, in The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug, the fatherâs feelings were well represented with his dissenting actions. When the father encountered Gregor as a bug for the first time, all he could think about was himself and the financial burden of the familyâs needs such as, âHow was the family going to be taken cared of?â âWhat he was going to?â âHow was the vermin (Gregor) going to take care of him?â He did not think, what happened to my beloved son? Instead he was âhostileâ and did not want to accept that Gregor had turned into an insect. In, The Metamorphosis, the narrator merely states âhe looked hostile and that his fist was clenched as if he wanted to knock Gregor back into his roomâ (Page 20, p.2). The narrator did not state the fatherâs feelings and readers were not able to know what the father was thinking as he was weeping (Page 20, p.2). Moreover, in, The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug, the fatherâs disgust for his son is clearly seen when the narrator states that the âfather no longer considered Gregor as a son but as a repulsive pest that needed to die.â As the father was chasing Gregor with the chief clerkâs stick, all he was stating was, âget out, get out, get out you filthy pest.â So, when readers read this scene from the rewrite, they were shown that the father really despised Gregor, that he had no sympathy for his sonâs dreary situation, and that he had no love for Gregor. As opposed to the original text, the father is continually shown as being very angry with Gregor without any explanation for his hostility. In, The Metamorphosis, the narrator explains how Gregor was fearful of getting a âlethal blow in his head or back with the stick that was in his fatherâs hand and how he was getting confused by the loud hissingâ that was being done by his father when he was trying to return to his room (Page 22, p. 2 & Page 23, p.1), however, there were no feelings and thoughts of the father being portrayed in this scene. So, in these scenes, the father lived in fear of what was going happen to him in the future. He did not think about how Gregor supported the family but was angry at Gregorâs transformation.
With the chief clerk, readers were able to get a recollection of his past in, The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug. When the chief clerk saw Gregor as a bug for the first time, he started to think âback on his youth and how he detested insects for their dreadful appearance.â The rewrite allowed readers to get to know the chief clerk personally by reminiscing on the things that he dreaded as a child, which were insects. In, The Metamorphosis, the chief clerkâs simply puts his hands on his open mouth as he slowly backs away from seeing Gregorâs newly transformed body (Page 20, p.2). Another detail that the rewrite gave was with, the chief clerk giving a thorough description of what Gregorâs new body looked like to him. For example, the chief clerk described Gregor as having a âbig stature, numerous, hairy legs, moving in all directions, and an antenna moving back and forth like a pendulum of a clock.â Although, the description of Gregorâs new body was being told throughout the original story, it was nice to hear it from another characterâs point of view. Also, in, The Day Gregor Samsa Revealed to his Parents that he was a Bug, the chief clerkâs frightful thoughts were shown when he thinks that Gregor was going to âconsume every part of his fleshâ and that âhe did not want to be touched by the hideous creature (Gregor Samsa).â As opposed to the omniscient narrator, the limited narrator in, The Metamorphosis, does not state the chief clerkâs thoughts or feeling for the situation, he merely is seen as trying to get to the entrance hall of Gregorâs home in order to escape (Page 21, p.2). So, in theses scenes, the fear of insects that the chief clerk was battling with in his youth had continued on into his adult life and it emotionally scarred him to believe every insect was âhideousâ in nature.
In conclusion, the retelling of The Metamorphosis from third-person limited to third-person omniscient shows readers that Gregorâs mother still acknowledged her son, although, she was frightened and did not know how he was going to return to his normal body. As for the chief clerk, he had a fear of insects from his childhood, so he was depicted as a fearful person that saw Gregor as a âhideous creature,â rather than being Gregor Samsa. And finally, the father was repulsed at Gregor and did not âconsider him as a son but as a repulsive pestâ. He feared about the future rather than think about the well-being of his son or a solution to cure his condition. The omniscient narrator showed readers that the other characters had their own battle with fear, whether it was financially, physically, or mentally, and that Gregorâs situation added fuel to their already underlying flame of fear.