Long Days Journey into Night: Character Analysis

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Paul Pellow 5W

Long Days Journey into Night: Character Analysis

In this essay I shall be examining two characters and their actions and roles in the book I shall also be comparing the two characters and examining their relationship with one another. I have chosen to examine Jamie and Edmund.

Jamie is considered a failure by our standards; he was neglected as a child by his parents and never loved. He has become an alcoholic, like his father, and has no prospects for the future. He is often described as a ‘whoremonger’ as he resorts to brothels to make up for the lack of love he receives at home. He is blamed for killing his brother Eugene who died as a baby from illness.

Edmund has been ill since he was born and this is often blamed on Jamie. He is the child born after Eugene and is mollycoddled by his mother, Mary who is afraid to let him go. He is beginning to become an alcoholic through his brother’s bad influence. He is Eugene O’Neill’s double in the play, and has sailed around the world but is now sick with consumption, even though he has no more lines than anyone else the play tends to revolve around him with it climaxing at the forgiveness of his father and brother for all the bad things he has done to him.  Both Jamie and Edmund are deeply aware of their mother’s drug problem.

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The first point I am addressing with Jamie is his role as a ‘failure’. During the book Jamie is always portrayed as a failure and as a scapegoat for people’s problems, meaning that he is not actually as bigger failure as he is portrayed. He is ashamed of his footing in life, and he is forced to work for his father, doing jobs around the house. Mary sums this up with; “Poor Jamie! How he hates working in the front where everyone can see him”. He is also following in his fathers footsteps by having far too much pride and ...

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